Toward a Comprehensive Anatomical Matrix for Crown Birds: Phylogenetic Insights from the Pectoral Girdle and Forelimb Skeleton
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Synopsis Phylogenetic analyses of phenotypic characters in crown-group birds often recover results that are strongly incongruous with the findings of recent phylogenomic analyses. Furthermore, existing morphological datasets for crown birds are frequently limited by restricted taxon or character sampling, inconsistent character construction, incorrect scoring, or a combination of several of these factors. As part of an effort to address these limitations, in this study we focus on identifying phylogenetically informative characters of the avian pectoral girdle and forelimb skeleton, elements of which are commonly preserved as avian fossils. We assembled and vetted a dataset of 203 characters, which were then scored for a phylogenetically diverse range of 75 extant avian taxa and incorporated into phylogenetic analyses. Analyses run without topological constraints exhibited notable conflicts with the results of recent phylogenomic studies, possibly due to functional convergence and rapid cladogenesis in the early evolutionary history of crown birds. Qualitative anatomical comparisons and quantitative metrics of homoplasy further highlighted the fact that similar morphologies in pectoral girdle and forelimb elements have evolved repeatedly in distantly related groups of birds, representing a major confounding factor in avian morphological phylogenetics. However, the implementation of molecular scaffolds allowed the identification of diagnostic character combinations for numerous avian clades previously only recognized through molecular data, such as Phaethontimorphae, Aequornithes, and Telluraves. Although large morphological datasets may not guarantee increased congruence with molecular phylogenetic studies, they can nonetheless be valuable tools for identifying anatomical synapomorphies of key clades, placing fossils into phylogenetic context, and studying macroevolutionary patterns within major groups of organisms.
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Acknowledgements: We would like to thank Juan Benito Moreno for assistance with scoring characters for Ichthyornis, Matt Wills, Gabe Bever, Rob Sansom, and John D'Angelo for helpful discussion, and the Willi Hennig Society for making TNT a freely available software. Comments from Peter Houde, Chris Torres, and an anonymous reviewer substantially improved the quality of this manuscript. Online resources provided by Jer-Ming Hu assisted with the translation of technical terms for the Chinese abstract. For the purpose of open access, the authors have applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising.
Funder: Allison R. “Pete” Palmer Student Research Award
Funder: Research Fellowship in Science from Jesus College, Cambridge
Funder: Sarah Woodhead Research Fellowship in Earth Sciences from Girton College
Funder: European Research Council Starting Grant: TEMPO; Grant(s): ERC-2015-STG-677774
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2517-4843