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Whence the birds: 200 years of dinosaurs, avian antecedents

Daniel J. Field, Maria Grace Burton, Juan Benito, Olivia Plateau, Guillermo Navalón

2025Biology Letters14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Among the most revolutionary insights emerging from 200 years of research on dinosaurs is that the clade Dinosauria is represented by approximately 11 000 living species of birds. Although the origin of birds among dinosaurs has been reviewed extensively, recent years have witnessed tremendous progress in our understanding of the deep evolutionary origins of numerous distinctive avian anatomical systems. These advances have been enabled by exciting new fossil discoveries, leading to an ever-expanding phylogenetic framework with which to pinpoint the origins of characteristic avian features. The present review focuses on four notable avian systems whose Mesozoic evolutionary history has been greatly clarified by recent discoveries: brain, kinetic palate, pectoral girdle and postcranial skeletal pneumaticity.

Topics & Concepts

PostcraniaBiologyCladeEvolutionary biologyZoologyPectoral girdlePhylogenetic treeBiological evolutionMesozoicEcologyPaleontologyTaxonAnatomyStructural basinGeneGeneticsBiochemistryPaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyEvolution and Paleontology StudiesIchthyology and Marine Biology
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