Avialans Temporal range: Late Jurassic–Recent, 155–0 Ma |
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Fossil of Confuciusornis, an avialan from the Early Cretaceous | |
Scientific classification | |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Superorder: | Dinosauria |
Order: | Saurischia |
Suborder: | Theropoda |
Branch: | Paraves |
Branch: | Avialae Gauthier, 1986 |
Subgroups | |
Avialae ("bird wings") is a clade of dinosaurs containing their only living representatives, birds (Aves), and the most immediate extinct relatives of birds.
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Systematic studies of the Avialae have produced different results depending on the specimens included and the definitions used. Including or excluding Archaeopteryx from the group Aves has a large effect on the subgroups of Avialae. Archaeopteryx, from the late Jurassic Period, may be the earliest known theropod dinosaur which may have had the capability of powered flight.[1] If Archaeopteryx is defined as an avian, then there are few non-avian avialans.
Avialae is traditionally defined as an apomorphy-based clade (that is, one based on physical characteristics). Jacques Gauthier named Avialae in 1986, and first defined it in 2001 as all dinosaurs that possessed feathered wings used in flapping flight, and the birds that descended from them.[2][3]
Gauthier[3] (page 34) identified four conflicting ways of defining the term "Aves", which is a problem because the same biological name is being used four different ways. Gauthier proposed a solution, number 4 below, which is to reserve the term Aves only for the crown group, the last common ancestor of all living birds and all of its descendants. He assigned other names to the other groups.
Under the fourth definition Archaeopteryx is an avialan, and not a member of Aves.
Several authors have use a similar, but branch-based, definition; "all theropods closer to birds than to Deinonychus."[4][5]
The cladogram below follows the results of a phylogenetic study by Gao and colleagues in 2002. Note that these authors used the more inclusive, node-based definition of Aves.[6] The placement of scansoriopterygids follows Zhang et al., 2008.[7]
Avialae |
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There are three taxa that are not members of Aves, but are avialans, in any definition of Avialae listed above.
Senter (2007) placed Scansoriopteryx as a sister group to Archaeopteryx within Avialae.[8] The age of the Daohugou Beds where Scansoriopteryx was collected may be Middle Jurassic; older than Archaeopteryx. A study by Zhang et al. (2008) confirmed that Scansoriopteryx was within Avialae and also added a new taxon, Epidexipteryx.[7]
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