Partial skeleton from the Paleocene of New Zealand illuminates the early evolutionary history of the Phaethontiformes (tropicbirds)

G. Mayr, V. D. De Pietri, L. Love, A. Mannering, E. Crouch, C. Reid, R. Scofield
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Abstract

Abstract We describe a new stem group representative of the Phaethontiformes (tropicbirds) from the Paleocene Waipara Greensand in New Zealand. The fossil consists of a partial skeleton with a nearly complete skull and represents the first unambiguous record of the Phaethontiformes from the Paleocene of the Southern Hemisphere. Clymenoptilon novaezealandicum gen. et sp. nov. has a proportionally shorter pelvis than Prophaethon shrubsolei from the early Eocene London Clay and appears to have been less adapted to foraging in an aquatic environment at or below sea-level. It is furthermore distinguished from P. shrubsolei and Lithoptila abdounensis from the late Paleocene/early Eocene of Morocco in a proportionally smaller foramen magnum of the skull. Together with other plesiomorphic features, this suggests that C. novaezealandicum is the sister taxon of a clade including Lithoptila, Prophaethon and crown group Phaethontiformes, and as one of the oldest stem group phaethontiforms the new species may indicate a Southern Hemispheric centre of origin of tropicbirds. After a recently described bony-toothed bird, C. novaezealandicum is the second seabird species from the Waipara Greensand to show affinities to taxa from the early Paleogene of the Northern Hemisphere. The wide early Paleogene distribution of the Phaethontiformes stands in sharp contrast to the geographic restriction of coeval diving seabirds, and different factors appear to have limited the dispersal of aquatic and pelagic seabird taxa in the early Paleogene. Gerald Mayr [Gerald.Mayr@senckenberg.de], Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt, Ornithological Section, Senckenberganlage 25, D-60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany; Vanesa L. De Pietri [vanesa.depietri@canterbury.ac.nz], University of Canterbury, School of Earth and Environment, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand; Al Mannering [alman@slingshot.co.nz], Canterbury Museum, Rolleston Avenue, Christchurch 8050, New Zealand; Leigh Love [lvlove@xtra.co.nz], PO Box 49, Waipara 7483, New Zealand; Erica Crouch [e.crouch@gns.cri.nz], GNS Science, 1 Fairway Drive, Lower Hutt 5040, New Zealand; Catherine Reid [catherine.reid@canterbury.ac.nz], University of Canterbury, School of Earth and Environment, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand; R. Paul Scofield [pscofield@canterburymuseum.com], Canterbury Museum, Rolleston Avenue, Christchurch 8050, New Zealand, and University of Canterbury, School of Earth and Environment, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand.
新西兰古新世的部分骨骼揭示了Phaethontiformes(热带鸟类)的早期进化史
摘要描述了新西兰怀帕拉格林桑古新世Phaethontiformes(热带鸟类)的一个新的茎群代表。该化石由部分骨架和一个几乎完整的头骨组成,代表了南半球古新世Phaethontiformes的第一个明确记录。在始新世早期的伦敦粘土中,novaezealandicum gen. et sp. 11 .的盆骨比Prophaethon shrubsolei的盆骨短,似乎不太适应在海平面或海平面以下的水生环境中觅食。此外,它与摩洛哥古新世晚期/始新世早期的P. shrubsolei和Lithoptila abdounensis的区别在于头骨的大孔相对较小。结合其他多形性特征,这表明C. novaezealandicum是包括Lithoptila, Prophaethon和crown group Phaethontiformes在内的分支的姐妹分类群,并且作为最古老的茎组Phaethontiformes之一,该新种可能表明热带鸟类的起源中心位于南半球。在最近发现的一种骨齿鸟之后,C. novaezealandicum是来自怀帕拉格林桑的第二个与北半球早期古近纪类群有亲缘关系的海鸟物种。古近纪早期phaethalloformes的广泛分布与同时期潜水海鸟的地理限制形成鲜明对比,不同的因素似乎限制了古近纪早期水生和远洋海鸟类群的分布。Gerald Mayr [Gerald.Mayr@senckenberg.de], Senckenberg研究所和法兰克福自然历史博物馆,鸟类科,Senckenberg lagage 25, D-60325 Frankfurt am Main,德国;Vanesa L. De Pietri [vanesa.depietri@canterbury.ac.nz],坎特伯雷大学地球与环境学院,Private Bag 4800,基督城8140,新西兰;阿尔·曼纳林[alman@slingshot.co.nz],坎特伯雷博物馆,罗勒斯顿大道,新西兰克赖斯特彻奇8050;Leigh Love [lvlove@xtra.co.nz],新西兰怀帕拉7483邮政信箱49号;Erica Crouch [e.crouch@gns.cri.nz], GNS Science, 1 Fairway Drive, Lower Hutt 5040,新西兰;Catherine Reid [catherine.reid@canterbury.ac.nz],坎特伯雷大学地球与环境学院,Private Bag 4800,基督城8140,新西兰;R. Paul Scofield [pscofield@canterburymuseum.com],坎特伯雷博物馆,罗勒斯顿大道,基督城8050,新西兰;坎特伯雷大学,地球与环境学院,私人袋4800,基督城8140,新西兰。
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