Cyphornis

Cyphornis
Cyphornis
Temporal range: Early Miocene (see text)
Conservation status
Fossil
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Subclass: Neornithes
Infraclass: Neognathae
Order: †Odontopterygiformes
Family: Pelagornithidae
Genus: Cyphornis
Cope, 1894
Species: C. magnus
Binomial name
Cyphornis magnus
Cope, 1894
Synonyms

see text

Cyphornis is a genus of the prehistoric pseudotooth birds. These were probably rather close relatives of either pelicans and storks, or of waterfowl, and are here placed in the order Odontopterygiformes to account for this uncertainty.[1]

Description

Only a single species, Cyphornis magnus, is known to date. It is only known with certainty from a single specimen, the rather abraded proximal part of a left tarsometatarsus which was found at Carmanah Point on Vancouver Island (Canada), where the Juan de Fuca Strait opens into the Pacific. The deposits from which it originated were initially dated to the Eocene; subsequent authors have usually assigned them to the Early Miocene though certainly rocks from around the Eo-Oligocene boundary also occur in the region where it was found. At the time of its discovery, it "probably represent[ed] the largest known bird of flight."[2] Even today it is one of the largest (though not heaviest) flying birds known.[3]

Some huge pseudotooth wing bone fossils have been found in Oregon. Specimen LACM 128462, a mostly complete proximal end of a left ulna, originates from the Keasey Formation of Washington County. LACM 127875 are fragments of the proximal humerus ends, the proximal right ulna and the right radius of a single individual presumed to be of the same species; they were found in the Pittsburg Bluff Formation near Mist. These remains all date from the Eo-Oligocene boundary, and considering their size they may well be of C. magnus if it is in fact that old, or of its ancestor or older relative.[4]

Systematics

Due to its fragmentary nature – the bones of pseudotooth bords are very thin-walled and light and notoriously easily broken and crushed when fossilizing – it was often allied with the enigmatic Cladornis, and though placed in the order Pelecaniformes (as pseudotooth birds often were) separated in a suborder Cladornithes. But the slightly older (Late Oligocene) Cladornis from the Argentinian part of Patagonia is known from a distal right tarsometatarsus only, and thus not directly comparable to Cyphornis. The two genera were allied simply because of their size and because they both vaguely reminded of the tarsometatarsus of pelicans. Today however, Cladornis is more generally held to be a terrestrial bird rather than a seabird. Other authors had been more conservative all along, and considered Cyphornis quite close to pelicans, uniting these as a superfamily Pelecanides in suborder Pelecanae, or later on (after the endings of taxonomic ranks were fixed to today's standard) Pelecanoidea in suborder Pelecani.[5]

To set it apart from its alleged relatives, Cyphornis was early on separated in a family Cyphornithidae together with Palaeochenoides mioceanus and eventually also Tympanonesiotes wetmorei which are also little-known pseudotooth birds but inhabited the Atlantic. But these are probably all closely related to the better-known Pelagornis, type genus of the family Pelagornithidae. And even if Cyphornis is the senior synonym of all the later-described genera (which is not very likely), according to the rules of zoological nomenclature the family name Pelagornithidae would not change. Thus Cyphornithidae would almost certainly be a junior synonym of Pelagornithidae even if the pseudotooth birds are (as some have proposed) divided into several families – rather than being all placed in the Pelagornithidae as is usual nowadays –, as Cyphornis, Osteodontornis, Palaeochenoides, Pelagornis and perhaps the smaller Tympanoneisiotes appear to be very closely related and are probably all part of a monophyletic lineage of (usually) giant pseudotooth birds. Only if the Pacific lineage is sufficiently distinct, the Cyphornithidae would remain valid, but in this case they would presumably not include the Atlantic forms.[6]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Bourdon (2005), Mayr (2009: p.59)
  2. ^ Miller (1911)
  3. ^ Miller (1911), Brodkorb (1963: pp.264-265), Olson (1985: pp.196,198-200), Goedert (1989), Mayr (2009: p.59)
  4. ^ Goedert (1989)
  5. ^ Lanham (1947), Wetmore (1956: pp.12-14), Brodkorb (1963: p.264), Hopson (1964), Olson (1985: p.193), Mayr (2009: pp.203-204)
  6. ^ Stone (1928), Brodkorb (1963: pp.264-265), Hopson (1964), Olson (1985: pp.195-198), Mlíkovský (2002: p.81), Mayr (2009: pp.58-59)

References

  • Bourdon, Estelle (2005): Osteological evidence for sister group relationship between pseudo-toothed birds (Aves: Odontopterygiformes) and waterfowls (Anseriformes). Naturwissenschaften 92(12): 586–591. doi:10.1007/s00114-005-0047-0 (HTML abstract) Electonic supplement (requires subscription)
  • Brodkorb, Pierce (1963): Catalogue of fossil birds. Part 1 (Archaeopterygiformes through Ardeiformes). Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences 7(4): 179-293. PDF or JPEG fulltext
  • Goedert, James L. (1989): Giant Late Eocene Marine Birds (Pelecaniformes: Pelagornithidae) from Northwestern Oregon. J. Paleontol. 63(6): 939-944. Abstract and first page text
  • Hopson, James A. (1964): Pseudodontornis and other large marine birds from the Miocene of South Carolina. Postilla 83: 1–19. Fulltext at the Internet Archive
  • Lanham, Urless N. (1947): Notes on the phylogeny of the Pelecaniformes. Auk 64(1): 65–70. DjVu fulltext PDF fulltext
  • Mayr, Gerald (2009): Paleogene Fossil Birds. Springer-Verlag, Heidelberg & New York. ISBN 3540896279
  • Miller, Loye H. (1911): A Synopsis of our Knowledge Concerning the Fossil Birds of the Pcific Coast of North America. Condor 13(4): 117-118. DjVu fulltext PDF fulltext
  • Mlíkovský, Jirí (2002): Cenozoic Birds of the World, Part 1: Europe. Ninox Press, Prague. ISBN 80-901105-3-8 PDF fulltext
  • Olson, Storrs L. (1985): The Fossil Record of Birds. In: Farner, D.S.; King, J.R. & Parkes, Kenneth C. (eds.): Avian Biology 8: 79-252. PDF fulltext
  • Stone, Witmer (1928): Recent Literature – Wetmore on Cyphornis magnus. Auk 45(4): 523. DjVu fulltext PDF fulltext
  • Wetmore, Alexander (1956): A check-list of the fossil and prehistoric birds of North America and the West Indies. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 131(5): 1-105. Fulltext at the Internet Archive

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Osteodontornis — Temporal range: Miocene (but see text) 20–6 Ma …   Wikipedia

  • Pelagornithidae — Temporal range: Late Paleocene Early Pleistocene 58.7–2.5 Ma …   Wikipedia

  • List of fossil birds — Birds are generally believed to have evolved from certain feathered theropod dinosaurs, and there is no real dividing line between birds and dinosaurs, except of course that some of the former survived the Cretaceous Tertiary extinction event… …   Wikipedia

  • Dasornis — Neptuniavis redirects here. For N. minor, see Odontopteryx. Dasornis Temporal range: Early Eocene (but see text) 51–50 Ma …   Wikipedia

  • Liste ausgestorbener Vögel — Die prähistorisch im späten Quartär ausgestorbenen und meist nur unvollständig fossilisierten Vogeltaxa sind unter Spätquartäre Avifauna aufgeführt. Die seit 1500 ausgestorbenen Vogeltaxa finden sich unter Liste der neuzeitlich ausgestorbenen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Pelagornithidae — Pseudozahnvögel Skelett von Pelagornis im National Museum of Natural History in Washington D.C. Zeitraum Eozän bis Pliozän 55,8 bis 3,0 Mio. Jahre …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”