
Bird Brain is a Misnomer – Largest study of its kind proves
It’s difficult to know what birds ‘think’ when they fly, but scientists in Australia and Canada are getting some remarkable new insights by looking inside birds’ heads.
Evolutionary biologists at Flinders University in South Australia and neuroscience researchers at the University of Lethbridge in Canada have teamed up to explore a new approach to recreating the brain structure of extinct and living birds by making digital ‘endocasts’ from the area inside a bird skeleton’s empty cranial space.
Published today in Biology Letters, the study led by the ‘Bones and Diversity Lab’ at Flinders and the Iwaniuk Lab at the University of Lethbridge in Alberta has found that dry museum skulls of long-dead birds can provide surprisingly detailed information on a species’ brain, including the size of the birds’ main computation centres for smartness and nimbleness.
The discovery was made possible by comparing historical microscopic sections of the brain with digital imprints of the bird’s inside braincase, in the largest such study of its kind covering 136 species.
“This showed that the two correspond so closely that there is no need for the actual brain to estimate a bird’s brain proportions,” says the lead author, Flinders University PhD Aubrey Keirnan.
“While ‘bird brain’ is often used as an insult, the brains of birds are so large that they are practically a braincase with a beak. We decided to test if this also means that the brain’s imprint on the skull reflects the proportions of two crucial parts of the actual brain.”
Joined by researchers at the Department of Neuroscience at the University of Lethbridge in Alberta, Canada, the team scanned the skulls of 136 bird species for which they also had microscopic brain sections or literature data.
This allowed them to determine if the volume of two crucial brain parts, the forebrain and the cerebellum, corresponds with the surface areas of the endocasts.
The extremely tight match between the ‘real’ and the ‘digital’ brain volumes surprised the researchers.
“We used computed microtomography to scan the bird skulls. This allows us to digitally fill the brain cavity to get the brain’s imprint, also called an ‘endocast’,” says senior co-author Associate Professor Vera Weisbecker, from Flinders University’s College of Science and Engineering.
“The correlations are nearly 1:1, which we did not expect. But this is excellent news because it allows us to gather insight into the neuroanatomy of elusive, rare and even extinct species without ever even seeing their brains.”
Associate Professor Vera Weisbecker says that advanced digital technologies are providing ever-improving access to some of the oldest puzzles in animal diversity.
“The great thing about digital endocasts is that they are non-destructive. In the old days, people needed to pour liquid latex into a brain case, wait for it to set, and then break the skull to get the endocast.
Trained Immunity: A New Frontier in Poultry Production
“Using non-destructive scanning not only allows us to create endocasts from the rarest of birds, it also produces digital files of the skulls and endocasts that can be shared with scientists and the public.”
Bird Brain is a Misnomer – With an extensive background in bird brain research, University of Lethbridge Professor Andrew Iwaniuk, who co-led this study with Associate Professor Weisbecker, says he did not expect such a clear correlation between brain tissue and endocasts.
“While most of the telencephalon (outer part of the forebrain) is visible from the outer surface, a substantial portion of the cerebellum is obscured by this region. Additionally, the avian cerebellum has ‘folds’ which are often obstructed by a large blood vessel called the occipital sinus,” says Professor Iwaniuk.
“Given that the degree of obscurity can vary between species, I did not expect a strong correlation between endocast surface area and brain volume across all species.”
Tulsa Zoo Announces Names for 5 Critically Endangered Malayan Tiger Cubs
Professor Iwaniuk adds that the study provides support for existing research by other scientists – including for critically endangered modern birds or perhaps even species gone extinct.
However, the team says that it remains to be seen how well the data can be applied to dinosaurs, which are the birds’ closest extinct relatives.
“For example, crocodiles are the closest living relatives of birds, but their brains look nothing like that of a bird – and their brains do not fill the braincase enough to be as informative,” adds Ms Keirnan.
The article, Avian telencephalon and cerebellum volumes can be accurately estimated from digital brain endocasts (2025) by Aubrey R Keirnan, Felipe Cunha, Sara Citron, Gavin Prideaux, Andrew N Iwaniuk and Vera Weisbecker will be published in Biology Letters (a Royal Society journal) DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2024.0596. Click
Latest Posts
- West Bengal Forms High-Level Committee To Review Draft Uniform Civil Code Bill
July 11, 2026 | Breaking News, India, Politics - Satluj Movie Screened In Gurdwara In Jammu
July 11, 2026 | Entertainment - Pune Building Collapse Death Toll Rises to 8, One Person Still Missing
July 11, 2026 | Breaking News, India - Itel Zeno 100 Pro, Itel Zeno 100 Lite Features (Expected)
July 11, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech, Technology - Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8, Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra Prices Surface Ahead of Unpacked Launch Event
July 11, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech, Technology - Sony IER-M500 In-Ear Monitors Launched With 5mm Driver, Hi-Res Audio: Price, Features
July 11, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech - Oppo Find N7 Leak Hints at Launch Timeline and Presence of 6,500mAh Battery, Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 Chip
July 11, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech, Technology - Meta Unveils Muse Spark 1.1 AI Model With 1 Million-Token Context Window, Model API Preview
July 11, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech, Technology - HMD Arc 2 Launched With Unisoc T603 Chip, 5,000mAh Battery: Price, Features
July 11, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech - Vivo X Fold 6 Global Launch Appears Near as Foldable Clears Indonesian Certification
July 11, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech, Technology