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An unusual bird (Theropoda, Avialae) from the Early Cretaceous of Japan suggests complex evolutionary history of basal birds

Authors :
Zhonghe Zhou
Masateru Shibata
Kazunori Miyata
Soichiro Kawabe
Takuya Imai
Yoichi Azuma
Min Wang
Source :
Communications Biology, Communications Biology, Vol 2, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The Early Cretaceous basal birds were known largely from just two-dimensionally preserved specimens from north-eastern China (Jehol Biota), which has hindered our understanding of the early evolution of birds. Here, we present a three-dimensionally-preserved skeleton (FPDM-V-9769) of a basal bird from the Early Cretaceous of Fukui, central Japan. Unique features in the pygostyle and humerus allow the assignment of FPDM-V-9769 to a new taxon, Fukuipteryx prima. FPDM-V-9769 exhibits a set of features comparable to that of other basalmost birds including Archaeopteryx. Osteohistological analyses indicate that FPDM-V-9769 is subadult. Phylogenetic analyses resolve F. prima as a non-ornithothoracine avialan basal to Jeholornis and outgroup of the Pygostylia. This phylogenetic result may imply a complex evolutionary history of basal birds. To our knowledge, FPDM-V-9769 represents the first record of the Early Cretaceous non-ornithothoracine avialan outside of the Jehol Biota and increases our understanding of their diversity and distribution during the time.<br />A new fossil bird from the Early Cretaceous of Japan provides evidence that the evolutionary history of early birds was more complex than previously realised. This new species also has important implications for the distribution of early birds, demonstrating that they inhabited temperate, lowland regions.

Details

ISSN :
23993642
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Communications biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aa03427e8bc7a21334e7c1b51ad68103