AI Article Synopsis

  • The fossil record and molecular studies reveal a rapid emergence of modern birds (Neornithes) after the K-Pg extinction event, despite the extinction of many related species.
  • Research indicates that early Neornithes were primarily non-arboreal, adapting to the ecological changes post-extinction, while later birds exhibited a shift toward arboreal lifestyles.
  • The K-Pg impact caused extensive forest destruction, which likely favored non-arboreal birds, leading to a diverse array of bird ecologies as they evolved in the aftermath.

Article Abstract

The fossil record and recent molecular phylogenies support an extraordinary early-Cenozoic radiation of crown birds (Neornithes) after the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction [1-3]. However, questions remain regarding the mechanisms underlying the survival of the deepest lineages within crown birds across the K-Pg boundary, particularly since this global catastrophe eliminated even the closest stem-group relatives of Neornithes [4]. Here, ancestral state reconstructions of neornithine ecology reveal a strong bias toward taxa exhibiting predominantly non-arboreal lifestyles across the K-Pg, with multiple convergent transitions toward predominantly arboreal ecologies later in the Paleocene and Eocene. By contrast, ecomorphological inferences indicate predominantly arboreal lifestyles among enantiornithines, the most diverse and widespread Mesozoic avialans [5-7]. Global paleobotanical and palynological data show that the K-Pg Chicxulub impact triggered widespread destruction of forests [8, 9]. We suggest that ecological filtering due to the temporary loss of significant plant cover across the K-Pg boundary selected against any flying dinosaurs (Avialae [10]) committed to arboreal ecologies, resulting in a predominantly non-arboreal post-extinction neornithine avifauna composed of total-clade Palaeognathae, Galloanserae, and terrestrial total-clade Neoaves that rapidly diversified into the broad range of avian ecologies familiar today. The explanation proposed here provides a unifying hypothesis for the K-Pg-associated mass extinction of arboreal stem birds, as well as for the post-K-Pg radiation of arboreal crown birds. It also provides a baseline hypothesis to be further refined pending the discovery of additional neornithine fossils from the Latest Cretaceous and earliest Paleogene.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2018.04.062DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mass extinction
12
crown birds
12
k-pg boundary
8
arboreal ecologies
8
birds
5
k-pg
5
arboreal
5
early evolution
4
evolution modern
4
modern birds
4

Similar Publications

Changes in species' habitats provide important insights into the effects of climate change. , a critically endangered species endemic to karst ecosystems, has a highly restricted distribution and is a key biological resource. Despite its ecological importance, the factors influencing its habitat suitability and distribution remain poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Morphological patterns of the European bison (Bison bonasus) skull.

Sci Rep

January 2025

Department of Morphological Sciences, Institute of Veterinary Medicine, Warsaw University of Life Sciences-SGGW, 02-776, Warsaw, Poland.

This study aimed to investigate the effects of environmental factors, sexual selection, and genetic variation on skull morphology by examining the skull structure of the European bison, a species at risk of extinction, and comparing it to other bovid species. The skull of the European bison was significantly bigger than that of other species of the tribe Bovini, and the results revealed considerable morphological differences in skull shape compared to other Bovini samples. The bison skull exhibited a broader shape in the frontal region and a more laterally oriented cornual process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Dietary breadth in kangaroos facilitated resilience to Quaternary climatic variations.

Science

January 2025

College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia, Australia.

Identifying what drove the late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions on the continents remains one of the most contested topics in historical science. This is especially so in Australia, which lost 90% of its large species by 40,000 years ago, more than half of them kangaroos. Determining causation has been obstructed by a poor understanding of their ecology.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Measuring trends in extinction risk: a review of two decades of development and application of the Red List Index.

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci

January 2025

BirdLife International, David Attenborough Building, Pembroke Street, Cambridge CB2 3QZ, UK.

The Red List Index (RLI) is an indicator of the average extinction risk of groups of species and reflects trends in this through time. It is calculated from the number of species in each category on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, with trends influenced by the number moving between categories when reassessed owing to genuine improvement or deterioration in status. The global RLI is aggregated across multiple taxonomic groups and can be disaggregated to show trends for subsets of species (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Human-driven habitat loss is recognized as the greatest cause of the biodiversity crisis, yet to date we lack robust, spatially explicit metrics quantifying the impacts of anthropogenic changes in habitat extent on species' extinctions. Existing metrics either fail to consider species identity or focus solely on recent habitat losses. The persistence score approach developed by Durán .

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!