• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

How Hornbills Joust In Midair At Car-Collision Speeds Without Getting Knocked Out

July 4, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

When helmeted hornbills go to battle, they wield their giant heads as weapons in an airborne jousting competition. Diagrams reveal the calamitous outcomes that send one contender spiraling toward the ground as the victor rises, but how do they smash into each other without falling unconscious? That’s just what scientists have been trying to find out.

As their common name would suggest, these birds are famous for their impressive headgear, armed with an enormous bulbous casque that’s both ornamental and protective. Known to science as Rhinoplax vigil, the helmeted hornbill is a curious species from an academic perspective as its giant helmet could explain how they’re able to bonk heads in midair without it ending in disaster for both parties.

“As I learned more about this species, I discovered a cross-section of a dried skull in a museum, revealing a shocking trainwreck of trabeculae [inter-connected bony struts] in the casque,” said Dr Mason Dean, an Associate Professor of Comparative Anatomy at the University of Hong Kong (HKU), in a statement. “When I heard that individuals are known to ram their casques together in mid-air displays, I just had to know more about the functional morphology.”

The team used micro-CT to peer inside the casque and uncover the secrets of the hornbills’ helmets. Their samples encompassed male and female specimens, including ones with joint flexibility and a rhamphotheca (the keratin sheath that covers the casque) that can slide off, so they could get a really good look at a wide range of helmets.

a helmeted hornbill with its enormous bulbous casque sitting on a branch

Just look at that thing.

Image credit: ZakiFF / Shutterstock.com

The results revealed that “trainwreck of trabeculae” were on average as thick as those found inside an elephant’s femur. If this seems excessive, you’re not wrong, as typically animal size corresponds to trabeculae thickness, so the helmeted hornbill has really taken this trait and run with it – even Dean’s socks were knocked clean off.

 “I’ve used micro-CT to look at a big diversity of animal skeletons, but I have never seen bony trabeculae like the ones we’ve found in the hornbill. That massive stand of trabeculae then channels back to the braincase, like a bundle of banyan tree prop roots, converging on a bony platform that’s far more reinforced than in other hornbills and relatives we’ve looked at,” he said. 

Helmeted hornbill mid-flight

“Males butt heads in ‘aerial jousting’ at the speed of automobile collisions.”

Image credit: Thipwan/Shutterstock.com

“All of these anatomical features start to give a sense of how the skull of the helmeted hornbill is adapted to withstand one of the fastest known biological impacts, where males butt heads in ‘aerial jousting’ at the speed of automobile collisions.”

This knowledge also has practical applications. “Understanding hornbill anatomy and how it allows for this jousting behaviour can give us clues about this elusive animal’s ecology and fundamental aspects of its life history and health,” said Dean. “Since hornbill functional anatomy is virtually unexplored, our findings will ideally also give new perspectives on the bio-inspired design of high-performing composites for tolerating damage from repeated collisions.”



While the helmeted hornbill’s casque is its greatest weapon, it’s also its greatest weakness. These animals are the subject of industrial-scale poaching that has been spurred on by a surge in demand for “avian ivory” coveted by some humans, so the race is on to protect the species before they get wiped out despite being as strong – in some respects – as elephants (which, by the way, are less athletic than flying hippos).

Advertisement

Awareness is one step in the right direction to protecting a lesser-known and remarkable species, so we can all do our bit by shouting about the incredible talents of the helmeted hornbill’s midair jousting, and that truly remarkable casque.

This study is being presented at the Society for Experimental Biology Annual Conference in Prague on July 2-5 2024.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. BAE Systems sees big opportunity in space after UK satellite deal
  2. Google introduces a new way to search that combines images and text into one query
  3. Why You Should Go To Sleep At The Same Time Each Night
  4. Scientists Take Smallest Measurement Of Gravity Ever In Quantum Quest

Source Link: How Hornbills Joust In Midair At Car-Collision Speeds Without Getting Knocked Out

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • We May Have Misjudged A Fundamental Fact About The Cambrian Explosion
  • The Shoebill Is A Bird So Bizarre That Some People Don’t Even Believe It’s Real
  • Colossal’s “Dire Wolves” Are Now 6 Months Old – And They’ve Doubled In Size
  • How To Fake A Fossil: Find Out More In Issue 36 Of CURIOUS – Out Now
  • Is It True Earth Used To Take 420 Days To Orbit The Sun?
  • One Of The Ocean’s “Most Valuable Habitats” Grows The Only Flowers Known To Bloom In Seawater
  • World’s Largest Digital Camera Snaps 2,104 New Asteroids In 10 Hours, Mice With 2 Dads Father Their Own Offspring, And Much More This Week
  • Simplest Explanation For “Anomalous” Signals Coming From Underneath Antarctica Ruled Out
  • “Lizard Shampoo” And Pagan Texts Suggest “Dark Age” Medicine Wasn’t So Dark After All
  • Japanese Macaques May Mourn Their Dead – As Long As They’re Not Maggot-Infested
  • This Is What You’d Hear If You Listened To Voyager’s Golden Record NASA Sent To Interstellar Space
  • RFK Jr’s New Vaccine Advisors Just Recommended Fall Flu Vaccines – But There’s A Catch
  • Controversial World-First Project To Create Human DNA From Scratch Takes First Steps
  • Humans Weren’t The First Species To Travel Around The Moon. They Lost This Race To An Unexpected Animal
  • When You Hack A Shark, You’re Exploiting A Glitch Billions Of Years In The Making
  • Wellness Whales, A New Blood Type, And A DJ Set From Space
  • Hate Flying Ants? We Used To Have Ones The Size Of Hummingbirds
  • ‘Tis The Season To See Titan Cast A Shadow On Saturn – Especially If You Are In America
  • World’s Bravest Vets Put Full Metal Dental Crown On A Bear For The First Time
  • “Spider Rain”: The Bizarre Phenomenon That’ll Send Arachnophobes Into A Spin
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version