Mayr Gerald
Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg, Sektion Ornithologie, Senckenberganlage 25, D-60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2005 Nov;80(4):515-42. doi: 10.1017/S1464793105006779.
The Paleogene (Paleocene-Oligocene) fossil record of birds in Europe is reviewed and recent and fossil taxa are placed into a phylogenetic framework, based on published cladistic analyses. The pre-Oligocene European avifauna is characterized by the complete absence of passeriform birds, which today are the most diverse and abundant avian taxon. Representatives of small non-passeriform perching birds thus probably had similar ecological niches before the Oligocene to those filled by modern passerines. The occurrence of passerines towards the Lower Oligocene appears to have had a major impact on these birds, and the surviving crown-group members of many small arboreal Eocene taxa show highly specialized feeding strategies not found or rare in passeriform birds. It is detailed that no crown-group members of modern 'families' are known from pre-Oligocene deposits of Europe, or anywhere else. The phylogenetic position of Paleogene birds thus indicates that diversification of the crown-groups of modern avian 'families' did not take place before the Oligocene, irrespective of their relative position within Neornithes (crown-group birds). The Paleogene fossil record of birds does not even support crown-group diversification of Galliformes, one of the most basal taxa of neognathous birds, before the Oligocene, and recent molecular studies that dated diversification of galliform crown-group taxa into the Middle Cretaceous are shown to be based on an incorrect interpretation of the fossil taxa used for molecular clock calibrations. Several taxa that occur in the Paleogene of Europe have a very different distribution than their closest extant relatives. The modern survivors of these Paleogene lineages are not evenly distributed over the continents, and especially the great number of taxa that are today restricted to South and Central America is noteworthy. The occurrence of stem-lineage representatives of many taxa that today have a restricted Southern Hemisphere distribution conflicts with recent hypotheses on a Cretaceous vicariant origin of these taxa, which were deduced from the geographical distribution of the basal crown-group members.
本文回顾了欧洲古近纪(古新世 - 渐新世)鸟类的化石记录,并根据已发表的分支系统学分析,将现生和化石类群置于系统发育框架中。渐新世之前的欧洲鸟类区系的特点是完全没有雀形目鸟类,而雀形目是当今最多样化、数量最丰富的鸟类类群。因此,小型非雀形目栖鸟的代表在渐新世之前可能具有与现代雀形目鸟类所占据的相似生态位。渐新世早期雀形目的出现似乎对这些鸟类产生了重大影响,许多小型树栖始新世类群现存的冠群成员表现出高度特化的取食策略,而这些策略在雀形目鸟类中并不常见或罕见。详细说明的是,在欧洲或其他任何地方的渐新世之前的沉积物中,均未发现现代“科”的冠群成员。因此,古近纪鸟类的系统发育位置表明,现代鸟类“科”的冠群分化在渐新世之前并未发生,无论它们在新鸟亚纲(冠群鸟类)中的相对位置如何。鸟类的古近纪化石记录甚至不支持新颚类鸟类最基部类群之一鸡形目的冠群在渐新世之前的分化,并且近期分子研究将鸡形目冠群类群的分化追溯到白垩纪中期,结果表明这些研究是基于对用于分子钟校准的化石类群的错误解释。欧洲古近纪出现的几个类群与其现存最近亲属的分布差异很大。这些古近纪谱系的现代幸存者在各大洲分布不均,尤其值得注意的是,如今有大量类群仅局限于南美洲和中美洲。许多如今分布局限于南半球的类群的干群代表的出现,与近期基于基部冠群成员的地理分布推断出的这些类群白垩纪替代起源的假说相冲突。