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Cretaceous bird from Brazil informs the evolution of the avian skull and brain

Authors :
Chiappe, Luis M.
Navalón, Guillermo
Martinelli, Agustín G.
Carvalho, Ismar de Souza
Miloni Santucci, Rodrigo
Wu, Yun-Hsin
Field, Daniel J.
Source :
Nature; November 2024, Vol. 635 Issue: 8038 p376-381, 6p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

A dearth of Mesozoic-aged, three-dimensional fossils hinders understanding of the origin of the distinctive skull and brain of modern (crown) birds1. Here we report Navaornis hestiaegen. et sp. nov., an exquisitely preserved fossil species from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil. The skull of Navaornisis toothless and large-eyed, with a vaulted cranium closely resembling the condition in crown birds; however, phylogenetic analyses recover Navaornisin Enantiornithes, a highly diverse clade of Mesozoic stem birds. Despite an overall geometry quantitatively indistinguishable from crown birds, the skull of Navaornisretains numerous plesiomorphies including a maxilla-dominated rostrum, an akinetic palate, a diapsid temporal configuration, a small cerebellum and a weakly expanded telencephalon. These archaic neurocranial traits are combined with a crown bird-like degree of brain flexion and a bony labyrinth comparable in shape to those of many crown birds but substantially larger. Altogether, the emergent cranial geometry of Navaornisshows an unprecedented degree of similarity between crown birds and enantiornithines, groups last sharing a common ancestor more than 130 million years ago2. Navaornisprovides long-sought insight into the detailed cranial and endocranial morphology of stem birds phylogenetically crownward of Archaeopteryx, clarifying the pattern and timing by which the distinctive neuroanatomy of living birds was assembled.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
635
Issue :
8038
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs67988570
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08114-4