Avialae

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Avialans
Fossil range: Late Jurassic – Recent
Mallard in midflight.
Mallard in midflight.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
Superorder: Dinosauria
Order: Saurischia
Suborder: Theropoda
(unranked) Avialae
Gauthier, 1986
Sub-clades

See text.

Avialae ("bird wings") is a clade containing birds (Aves) and their most immediate dinosaurian relatives.

Contents

[edit] Competing definitions

There is much debate and controversy about the phylogeny of dinosaurs and birds, and different studies produce different results. The group Avialae can include different subgroups when it is defined differently. Including or excluding Archaeopteryx from the group Aves has a large effect on these subgroups of Avialae.

[edit] Character-based definition

Avialae is traditionally defined as an apomorphy-based clade (that is, one based on physical characteristics). Jacques Gauthier named Avialae in 1986, and first defined it in 2001 as all dinosaurs that possessed feathered wings used in flapping flight, and the birds that descended from them.[1][2]

[edit] Avialae vs. Aves

Gauthier [2] (page 34) identified four conflicting ways of defining the term "Aves", which is a problem because the same biological name is being used four different ways. Gauthier proposed a solution, number 4 below, which is to reserve the term Aves only for the last common ancestor of all living birds and all of its descendants. He assigned other names to the other groups.

  • 1) Aves can mean those advanced archosaurs with feathers (alternately Avifilopluma)
  • 2) Aves can mean those that fly (alternately Avialae)
  • 3) Aves can mean all reptiles closer to birds than to crocodiles (alternately Panaves)
  • 4) Aves can mean the last common ancestor of all the currently living birds and all of its descendants (a "crown group"). (alternately Neornithes)

Under the fourth definition Archaeopteryx is an Avialan, and not a member of Aves. However, Gauthier's restriction of Aves to modern birds has not been widely adopted in the paleontological literature, which has led to the wide usage of Avialae to include all dinosaurs closer to birds than to dromaeosaurs. This often leaves few, if any, non-avian avialans (for example, the only non-avian avialan in many recent studies has been Epidendrosaurus--all other primitive birds are considered true avians).

The earliest known theropod dinosaur which may have had the capability of powered flight is Archaeopteryx from the late Jurassic Period.[3] Archaeopteryx is almost always included within Avialae, and is the earliest known member of that group.

[edit] Branch-based definition

Several authors have use a similar, but branch-based, definition; "all theropods closer to birds than to Deinonychus."[4][5]

In 2002, Clarke and Norell[6] used this definition in publishing a rigorously detailed phylogeny of known avialans. In their results on page 26, they organized the Avialae in successive stages of evolution, which are arranged here from most primitive at top to most advanced at bottom;

Epidendrosaurus is not included in their analysis (it had not been described yet), but Xu in 2002 and Senter in 2007 placed it as a sister group to Archaeopteryx. Epidendrosaurus, which may hail from the Middle Jurassic, before Archaeopteryx, would then be placed above Archaeopteryx on the list above.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Gauthier, J. (1986). "Saurischian monophyly and the origin of birds." In: K. Padian, ed. The origin of birds and the evolution of flight. San Francisco: California, Acad.Sci. pp.1–55. (Mem.Calif.Acad.Sci.8.)
  2. ^ a b Gauthier, J., and de Queiroz, K. (2001). "Feathered dinosaurs, flying dinosaurs, crown dinosaurs, and the name Aves." Pp. 7-41 in New perspectives on the origin and early evolution of birds: proceedings of the International Symposium in Honor of John H. Ostrom (J. A. Gauthier and L. F. Gall, eds.). Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A.
  3. ^ Alonso, P. D., Milner, A. C., Ketcham, R. A., Cookson, M. J. & Rowe, T. B. (2004). The avian nature of the brain and inner ear of Archaeopteryx. Nature. 430(7000): 666–669. PMID 15295597. doi:10.1038/nature02706. PDF fulltext Supplementary info
  4. ^ Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; Osmólska, Halszka (eds.) (2004). The Dinosauria, Second Edition. University of California Press., 861 pp.
  5. ^ Senter, P. (2007). "A new look at the phylogeny of Coelurosauria (Dinosauria: Theropoda)." Journal of Systematic Palaeontology, (doi:10.1017/S1477201907002143).
  6. ^ Clarke,J.A. and Norell M.A. (2002) "The Morphology and Phylogenetic Position of Apsaravis ukhaana from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia" American Museum Novitates, No. 3387, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024.

[edit] See also