About: Avialae is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 89 publications have been published within this topic receiving 9647 citations. The topic is also known as: Avian dinosaurs.
TL;DR: There is no reason-phylogenetic, morphometric or otherwise-to conclude that Caudipteryx is anything other than a small non-avialan theropod dinosaur.
Abstract: Caudipteryx zoui is a small enigmatic theropod known from the Early Cretaceous Yixian Formation of the People's Republic of China. From the time of its initial description, this taxon has stimulated a great deal of ongoing debate regarding the phylogenetic relationship between non-avialan theropods and birds (Avialae) because it preserves structures that have been uncontroversially accepted as feathers (albeit aerodynamically unsuitable for flight). However, it has also been proposed that both the relative proportions of the hind limb bones (when compared with overall leg length), and the position of the center of mass in Caudipteryx are more similar to those seen in extant cusorial birds than they are to other non-avialan theropod dinosaurs. This conclusion has been used to imply that Caudipteryx may not have been correctly interpreted as a feathered non-avialan theropod, but instead that this taxon represents some kind of flightless bird. We review the evidence for this claim at the level of both the included fossil specimen data, and in terms of the validity of the results presented. There is no reason-phylogenetic, morphometric or otherwise-to conclude that Caudipteryx is anything other than a small non-avialan theropod dinosaur.
TL;DR: The ascendancy of dinosaurs on land near the close of the Triassic now appears to have been as accidental and opportunistic as their demise and replacement by therian mammals at the end of the Cretaceous.
Abstract: The ascendancy of dinosaurs on land near the close of the Triassic now appears to have been as accidental and opportunistic as their demise and replacement by therian mammals at the end of the Cretaceous. The dinosaurian radiation, launched by 1-meter-long bipeds, was slower in tempo and more restricted in adaptive scope than that of therian mammals. A notable exception was the evolution of birds from small-bodied predatory dinosaurs, which involved a dramatic decrease in body size. Recurring phylogenetic trends among dinosaurs include, to the contrary, increase in body size. There is no evidence for co-evolution between predators and prey or between herbivores and flowering plants. As the major land masses drifted apart, dinosaurian biogeography was molded more by regional extinction and intercontinental dispersal than by the breakup sequence of Pangaea.
TL;DR: This is the first mature non-avian dinosaur to be found that is smaller than Archaeopteryx, and it eliminates the size disparity between the earliest birds and their closest non-Avian theropod relatives.
Abstract: Non-avian dinosaurs are mostly medium to large-sized animals, and to date all known mature specimens are larger than the most primitive bird, Archaeopteryx. Here we report on a new dromaeosaurid dinosaur, Microraptor zhaoianus gen. et sp. nov., from the Early Cretaceous Jiufotang Formation of Liaoning, China. This is the first mature non-avian dinosaur to be found that is smaller than Archaeopteryx, and it eliminates the size disparity between the earliest birds and their closest non-avian theropod relatives. The more bird-like teeth, the Rahonavis-like ischium and the small number of caudal vertebrae of Microraptor are unique among dromaeosaurids and improve our understanding of the morphological transition to birds. The nearly completely articulated foot shows features, such as distally positioned digit I, slender and recurved pedal claws, and elongated penultimate phalanges, that are comparable to those of arboreal birds. The discovery of these in non-avian theropods provides new insights for studying the palaeoecology of some bird-like theropod dinosaurs.
TL;DR: New evidence is provided suggesting that basal dromaeosaurid dinosaurs were four-winged animals and probably could glide, representing an intermediate stage towards the active, flapping-flight stage of proavians.
Abstract: Although the dinosaurian hypothesis of bird origins is widely accepted, debate remains about how the ancestor of birds first learned to fly. Here we provide new evidence suggesting that basal dromaeosaurid dinosaurs were four-winged animals and probably could glide, representing an intermediate stage towards the active, flapping-flight stage. The new discovery conforms to the predictions of early hypotheses that proavians passed through a tetrapteryx stage.
TL;DR: Analysis of the five presently known skeletal specimens of Archaeopteryx confirm the conclusions (long rejected by most subsequent workers) of Heilmann (1926), Lowe (1935, 1944, 1944) and Holmgren (1955), namely, that the skeletal anatomy of Archaeipteryx is extraordinarily similar to that of contemporaneous and succeeding coelurosaurian dinosaurs.
Abstract: The question of the origin of birds can be equated with the origin of Archaeopteryx, the oldest known bird. Analysis of the five presently known skeletal specimens of Archaeopteryx. and comparison with the skeletal anatomy of the several reptilian groups that have been proposed as possible ancestors of birds (Ornithopoda, Theropoda, Hseudosuchla and Sphenosuchidac), confirm the conclusions (long rejected by most subsequent workers) of Heilmann (1926), Lowe (1935, 1944) and Holmgren (1955), namely, that the skeletal anatomy of Archaeopteryx is extraordinarily similar to that of contemporaneous and succeeding coelurosaurian dinosaurs. Rejection of these similarities as adaptive structures only (parallel or convergent similarities), and therefore of no phylogenetic importance, is here considered invalid. Heilmann was the first to identify the only evidence that has been cited so far for dismissing coelurosaurian-avian ancestral–descendant relationships, the supposed absence of clavicles in all theropods, and on that basis suggested a common Archaeopteryx–dinosaur ancestry among pseudosuchian reptiles. That evidence is negative and thus inconclusive, and is now known to be false.
With the exception of fused clavicles and unique ischial morphology, virtually every skeletal feature of Archaeopteryx is known in several contemporaneous or near-contemporary coelurosaurian dinosaurs and many of these conditions are unrelated, specialized features (the detailed morphology of the manus, metacarpus, carpus, humerus, scapulocoracoid, pes, metatarsus, tarsus, femur, pubis, ilium, skull and mandibles). The presence of so many derived characters in common clearly establishes that the closest ancestral affinities ot Archaeopteryx are with coelurosaurian theropods. There is no contrary evidence and any other explanation is illogical.
All available evidence indicates unequivocally that Archaeopteryx evolved from a small coelurosaurian dinosaur and that modern birds are surviving dinosaurian descendants. Stated simply, avian phylogeny was: Pseudosuchia Coelurosauria Archaeopteryx higher birds.
SUMMARY
The question of the origin of birds can be equated with the question of the origin of Archaeopteryx. This last question evokes two possible answers, depending upon how one views the importance of “primitive versus derived characters” in assessing phylogenetic relationships. One possible answer is: Archaeopteryx is a direct descendant of some unknown, but presumably Euparkeria-like pseudosuchian. This answer is predicated on the belief that Archaeopteryx only parallels or converges with various coelurosaurs in certain skeletal similarities. This is the view now held by the majority of biologists– a view that I find unacceptable. The second possible answer is: Archaeopteryx is directly descendant from a small unknown Ornitholestes-like coelurosaurian dinosaur. This answer assumes that skeletal similarities between coelurosaurs and Archaeopteryx are derived from a common ancestor, itself a coelurosaur. This is the view advocated here.
There is no evidence to support an ornithischian ancestry of birds. The pubis of Archaeopteryx apparently was not reflected backward as in ornithischians and modern birds, and in any case, the ornithischian pubis is only superficially like that of living birds. Nor is the so-called ornithopod foot like that of birds.
Evidence of close theropod–Archaeopteryx relationships, however, is abundant: the presence of the same, multiple, specialized adaptations in both Archaeopteryx and various coelurosaurs (tridactyl manus, metacarpus and carpus morphology, forelimb and pectoral girdle structure, four-toed pes, reversed hallux, metatarsal morphology, mesotarsal joint, hindlimb construction, pelvic form, plus elongated forelimbs, bipedal posture, vertebral structure and formula, and basic cranial morphology).
The presence in Archaeopteryx, coelurosaurs and pseudosuchians of several primitive characters in common (thecodont dentition, sclerotic ring, possibly amphicoelous vertebrae, long caudal series, gastralia, pubic symphysis, short coracoids) indicates only a probable common ancestry. It does not establish that the Coelurosauria could not have given rise to Archaeopteryx–and higher birds. There is no evidence (outside of Lagosuchus and Lagerpeton) of shared derived characters to suggest a close evolutionary relationship between classic pseudosuchians and Archaeopteryx. Similarly, there is no clear-cut evidence in the form of shared derived characters to link Archaeopteryx with Sphenosuchus.
The absence of clavicles in theropods (now known to be false), once considered as conclusive evidence against a coelurosaurian ancestry of birds, is no more significant than is the absence of a sternum in all known pseudosuchians as evidence against a pseudosuchian ancestry of all other archosaurs. The absence of any known “ideal” coelurosaurian pre-Archaeopteryx is only negative and inconclusive evidence, especially in view of our meagre and exceedingly deficient knowledge about Early and Middle Jurassic terrestrial vertebrates.
All available evidence indicates that the immediate ancestor of Archaeopteryx was a small coelurosaurian dinosaur and that the phylogeny of avian ancestry was: Pseudosuchia–Coelurosauria–Archaeopteryx:– higher birds.
Ornithopod-Archaeopteryx ancestral-descendant affinities may be dismissed because of the false “avian” organization of the pelvis in the Berlin specimen of Archaeopteryx and the merely superficially bird-like construction of the ornithisehian pelvis. The suite of specialized characters unique to ornithischians (e.g., predentary, tooth morphology), that occur even in Triassic representatives, is further evidence for dismissing close affinity between ornithopods and Archaeopteryx. The supposed close relationship between birds and pseudosuchians is judged to be remote at best, due to the completely primitive nature of the few anatomical features which pseudosuchians have in common with Archaeopteryx. Sphenosuchus, a primitive and early archosaur, is also a potential avian ancestor, but existing evidence consists of primitive archosaurian features plus a few similarities with certain modern birds. These similarities, which are present in two groups that are separated from each other by more than 200 million years, and which cannot be demonstrated in Archaeopteryx, are considered irrelevant to the origins of Archaeopteryx and subsequent birds.