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The big surprise is that it turns out modern penguins have large melanosomes packed into grape-like clusters, unlike those of any other known bird, while the extinct giant penguin's smaller melanosomes resembled those of other birds, Clarke said. The scientists can't explain the difference. But they say it probably has to do with more than the black tuxedo coloration of today's penguins. Melanin, the pigment inside melanosomes, helps feathers resist breakage. So one possibility is that the melanosomes got bigger during later penguin evolution as the birds became better underwater swimmers and needed a more hydrodynamic covering. Clarke is anxious to get back to Peru and see if more fossil finds will help tell. The work was funded by the National Science Foundation and National Geographic Society. ___ Online: Science: http://www.sciencemag.org/
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