Helmeted hornbill cranial kinesis: Balancing mobility and stability in a high-impact joint

Mike Schindler*, Benjamin Flaum, Armita Razieh Manafzadeh, Viktoriia Kamska, Kanmani Chandra Rajan, Maria Jose Robles Malagamba, Ruien Hu, Daniel Baum, Mason N. Dean*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

Prokinesis—in which a craniofacial joint allows the rostrum to move relative to the braincase—is thought to confer diverse advantages in birds, mostly for feeding. A craniofacial joint would, however, be a weak link if cranial stability is important. Paradoxically, we have identified a craniofacial joint in helmeted hornbills (Rhinoplax vigil), birds known for violent head-butting behavior. To understand how the helmeted hornbill balances the competing demands of kinesis and collision, we combine manual craniofacial joint manipulation, skull micro-computed tomography (μCT) and articular raycasting, also comparing our data with μCT scans of 10 closely-related species that do not aggressively head-butt. The helmeted hornbill boasts a particularly massive casque, a distinctive upper mandible protrusion fronting the braincase; the craniofacial joint is immediately caudal to this, a standard prokinetic hinge joint position, at the dorsal border of braincase and upper mandible. However, whereas the craniofacial joint in all bucerotiform bird species we examined was only a slender bridge, the helmeted hornbill's joint is exceptionally reinforced. Raycasting analyses revealed high correspondence between the extremely broad joint facets, with reciprocal topographies of braincase and casque fitting like complex puzzle pieces. The result is a joint with a single degree of freedom and limited range of motion, increasing the gape when elevated, but conversely stable when depressed. With the dense network of bony trabeculae in the casque also funneling back to this joint, we infer that the damaging effects of high cranial impact are mitigated, not by dissipating impact energy, but through a skull architecture with a prodigious safety factor. © 2025 The Author(s). The Anatomical Record published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Association for Anatomy.
Original languageEnglish
JournalAnatomical Record
Online published2 Mar 2025
DOIs
Publication statusOnline published - 2 Mar 2025

Funding

The Bycanistes subcylindricus scan was performed at the Montpellier MRI platform via a grant to MND from the Joint Research Scheme sponsored by the Research Grants Council (RGC) of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China, and the Consulate General of France in Hong Kong (F-CityU103/21). The MRI platform is a member of the national infrastructure France-BioImaging supported by the French National Research Agency (ANR-10-INBS-04, «Investments for the future»), the Labex CEMEB (ANR-10-LABX-0004) and NUMEV (ANR-10-LABX-0020). This study was partly supported by a Strategic Interdisciplinary Research Grant of the City University of Hong Kong (SIRG: 7020042) to MND. MS was supported by an HFSP Program Grant (RGP0010-2020) and VK was supported by a University Grants Committee General Research Fund grant (CityU11102022), both to MND. ARM was supported by a Gaylord Donnelley Postdoctoral Environmental Fellowship from the Yale Institute for Biospheric Studies and a Postdoctoral Research in Biology Fellowship from the U.S. National Science Foundation (DBI-2209144). Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.

Research Keywords

  • Bucerotiformes
  • flexure bearing
  • head-butting
  • living hinge
  • prokinesis
  • skull biomechanics
  • traumatic brain injury

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