Bruce Museum, Greenwich, CT 06830, USA; Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL 60605, USA; American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024, USA; Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20013, USA.
Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL 60605, USA; American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024, USA; University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Curr Biol. 2019 Feb 18;29(4):657-663.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.12.040. Epub 2019 Feb 7.
Beak shape plays a key role in avian radiations and is one of the most intensely studied aspects of avian evolution and ecology [1-4]. Perhaps no other group is more closely associated with the study of beak shape than Passeriformes (passerines or perching birds), the most species-rich ordinal clade of modern birds. However, despite their extraordinary present-day diversity, our understanding of early passerine evolution has been hindered by their sparse fossil record [5, 6]. Here, we describe two new species of early Eocene stem passerines from the Green River Formation of the United States and the Messel Formation of Germany. These species are the oldest fossil birds to exhibit a finch-like beak and provide the earliest evidence for a diet focused on small, hard seeds in crown birds. Given that granivory is a key adaptation that allows passerines to exploit open temperate environments, it is notable that both species occurred in subtropical environments [7, 8]. Phylogenetic analyses place both species within the Psittacopedidae, an extinct Eocene clade of zygodactyl stem passeriforms that also includes the slender-beaked nectarivorous Pumiliornis, the short-beaked Psittacopes, and the thrush-beaked Morsoravis. Our results reveal that stem passerines attained a diversity of beak shapes paralleling many of the morphotypes present in extant passerine finches, thrushes, and sunbirds, more than 35 million years before these morphotypes arose in the crown group. Extinction of these ecologically diverse fossil taxa may be linked to more sophisticated nest construction in anisodactyl crown passerines versus cavity-nesting in Eocene zygodactyl stem passerines [9].
鸟嘴形状在鸟类辐射中起着关键作用,是研究鸟类进化和生态学的最集中的方面之一[1-4]。也许没有其他群体比雀形目(雀类或鸣禽)更密切地与鸟嘴形状的研究相关,雀形目是现代鸟类中物种最丰富的目级进化枝。然而,尽管它们在当今具有非凡的多样性,但由于它们稀少的化石记录[5,6],我们对早期雀形目进化的理解受到了阻碍。在这里,我们描述了来自美国绿河组和德国梅塞尔组的两个新的始新世早期雀形目物种。这些物种是最古老的具有雀类鸟嘴的化石鸟类,为雀形目鸟类以小而硬的种子为食的饮食提供了最早的证据。鉴于食谷性是一种允许雀形目动物利用开阔温带环境的关键适应,值得注意的是,这两个物种都出现在亚热带环境中[7,8]。系统发育分析将这两个物种置于 Psittacopedidae 内,Psittacopedidae 是一个已灭绝的始新世分支,包括长嘴的食蜜的 Pumiliornis、短嘴的 Psittacopes 和画眉嘴的 Morsoravis。我们的研究结果表明,雀形目鸟类的嘴形多样性与现存雀形目雀类、画眉和太阳鸟中的许多形态类型相媲美,比这些形态类型在冠群中出现早了 3500 多万年。这些生态多样化的化石类群的灭绝可能与在 anisodactyl 冠雀形目鸟类中更复杂的巢结构与在始新世 zygodactyl 雀形目鸟类中的洞穴筑巢有关[9]。