4.1 Review

What Comes First: The Egg or the Mathematics? Review Article

Journal

BIOLOGY BULLETIN
Volume 50, Issue 3, Pages 237-243

Publisher

PLEIADES PUBLISHING INC
DOI: 10.1134/S1062359022602701

Keywords

birds; eggs; egg shape model; mathematical geometry; natural ovoids

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Artists use imagery, while scientists use mathematical formulae to describe the universe and natural environment. This review focuses on the mathematical description of egg shapes in birds and the recent development of the Narushin-Romanov-Griffin (NRG) model, which successfully combines biological and mathematical concepts. The NRG model provides an exact mathematical description of any bird's egg shape, including spherical, elliptical, ovoid, and pear-shaped eggs.
When we wish to describe our Universe, our planet Earth, natural environment, and our surroundings, artists often use imagery, whereas scientists attempt to use mathematical formulae. It begs the fundamental question: was the nature and the universe preceded by a clear mathematical design, or did the mathematic description appear subsequently? In this review, we addressed a biological issue of shapes in nature and, specifically, egg shapes in birds, including poultry, as one of most exciting avian adaptations. In order to compute the shape and volume of eggs as a marker of fitness, discover subtle nuances of the evolution of nest parasitism as in cuckoos, detect double-yolk eggs in poultry, develop methods for hatchability improvement and in ovo sex identification, and other things, an exact description of egg shape is urgently needed. We overviewed here the recent mathematical development of a universal egg shape equation called the Narushin-Romanov-Griffin (NRG) model. Following the Latin term ab ovo meaning from the beginning, the origin, the egg, the NRG model successfully tried to combine two concepts, biological object and mathematical geometry, and enabled to fulfil the formidable task of describing, mathematically, any bird's egg. Eventually, a series of mathematical formulae was developed that could define bird eggs of any shape present in nature including spherical, elliptical, ovoid and pear-shaped ones.

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