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Dasornis

Dasornis is a genus of the prehistoric pseudotooth birds. These were probably rather close relatives of either pelicans and storks, or of waterfowl, and are here placed in the order Odontopterygiformes to account for this uncertainty.[1]

Dasornis
Temporal range: Early Eocene (but see text)
51–50 Ma
Reconstructed skeleton
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Odontopterygiformes
Family: Pelagornithidae
Genus: Dasornis
Owen, 1870
Type species
Dasornis emuinus
Bowerbank, 1854
Species

D. emuinus (1854)
D. toliapica (1873)
D. abdoun (2010)

Synonyms

Numerous, see text

Almost all known material of this bird is from some 50 million years ago (Ma) and has been recovered from the Ypresian (Early Eocene) London Clay of the Isle of Sheppey (England). The exception are a few approximately 45 Ma-old remains from the Lutetian (Middle Eocene, MP11-13) of Etterbeek (Belgium) that are only tentatively included here, and some even more conjectural remains from outside Europe (see below).[2]

Description Edit

 
Skeleton from below

Like those of its relatives, the thin-walled bones of Dasornis broke easily and thus very few fossils – though still far more than of the average pseudotooth bird genus – are in decent condition. Among these is a superbly preserved partial skull that has been of crucial importance in sorting out the convoluted synonymy of this genus. Apart from that and another not quite as well-preserved partial skull, however, a number of beak and cranium pieces as well as a few broken remains of wing and tarsometatarsus bones make up the known remains of Dasornis. The most tell-tale characteristic of the present genus are the combination of Paleogene age and huge size. But given the fragmented state of these, it is not at all clear whether the genus was restricted to the North Atlantic (and perhaps the adjacent Paratethys) or occurred also in the Pacific and in the Southern Hemisphere, where fossils of a similar size were found (see below).[3]

This genus belongs to the group of huge pseudotooth birds, with wingspans in excess of 5 m (16 ft), and probably as much as 6 m (20 ft). The complete head and bill probably measured almost 45 cm (1.48 ft) in life, the eye socket had a diameter of 55 millimetres (2.2 in) and the humerus at its distal end was about 35 millimetres (1.4 in) wide. The well-preserved skull fossil shows deep grooves along the underside of the upper bill, with pits to accommodate the lower bill's "teeth". Thus, only the upper "teeth" were visible when the bird closed its bill. Dasornis resembles the much smaller Odontopteryx in having a jugal arch that is mid-sized, tapering and stout behind the orbital process of the prefrontal bone, unlike in the large Neogene Osteodontornis. Also, its paroccipital process is much elongated back- and downwards, again like in Odontopteryx but unlike in Pseudodontornis longirostris. Further traits in which Dasornis agreed with Odontopteryx – and differed from Pelagornis (a contemporary of Osteodontornis) are a deep and long handward-pointing pneumatic foramen in the fossa pneumotricipitalis of the humerus, a latissimus dorsi muscle attachment site on the humerus that consists of two distinct segments instead of a single long, and a large knob that extends along the ulna where the ligamentum collaterale ventrale attached. As the traits as found in Odontopteryx and Dasornis are probably plesiomorphic, they cannot be used to argue for a closer relationship between the two Paleogene genera than either had with Osteodontornis and/or Pelagornis.[4]

Systematics and taxonomy Edit

Only a single species, Dasornis emuinus, is accepted today. However, it has a very convoluted synonymy, with its fossil remains assigned to no less than six genera (of which two were invalid junior homonyms) and divided between at least four species – excluding spelling errors and invalid "corrections" – that were variously moved between these genera for almost 150 years:[5]

1854-1890: "Lithornis" emuinus, "Megalornis" of Seeley, Dasornis and Argillornis
The first fossil of D. emuinus, a piece of right humerus shaft, was found in the Ypresian (Early Eocene) London Clay of the Isle of Sheppey (England). It was misidentified as a tibiotarsus of the paleognath Lithornis and described as L. emuinus by James Scott Bowerbank in 1854. Harry Govier Seeley recognized this error in 1866 and established the genus Megalornis, though he misspelled the specific name as emuianus. However, the genus name he chose had already been used for some of the great herons (Ardea). Richard Owen established the genera Dasornis (in 1870) and Argillornis (in 1878)[6] for, respectively, a broken skull and two humerus ends that were found in the same deposits. Some authors[who?] claim he had already erected the former genus in 1869, but in that year he only used the names informally in his brief initial report on the newly discovered skull. Misled by the skull's large size and perhaps overly eager to be the first to describe the remains of a "European moa" (Owen was the foremost authority on these New Zealand endemics at that time), he placed Dasornis in the Dinornithidae. Argillornis, on the other hand, was recognized early on as some sort of aquatic bird, but its immense size puzzled paleontologists to no little extent.[7]

1891-1985: spelling errors, "Neptuniavis" and "completely unrealistic"[8] taxonomy
Subsequent authors, noting that it was quite obviously not a paleognath ratite, placed Dasornis in the Gastornithidae. Richard Lydekker in 1891 proposed to rename Owen's D. londinensis to D. londiniensis, and later that year wanted to change Dasornis to Dasyornis. But the altered specific name was not in accordance with the rules of zoological nomenclature, and neither was the genus name he chose – and which, moreover, had already been used earlier by Nicholas Aylward Vigors and Thomas Horsfield for the bristlebirds. In 1921, Kálmán Lambrecht "corrected" Seeley's Megalornis emuianus to emuinus and in 1933 he misspelled Owen's A. longipennis as longipes. Pierce Brodkorb resolved the Megalornis homonymy in 1963 by merging "M." emuinus with A. longipennis, combining the older specific name emuinus and the then-valid genus name Argillornis. However, he rather inexplicably allied Argillornis with the enigmatic Mesozoic Elopteryx nopcsai – a sort of "wastebin taxon" for Late Cretaceous maniraptoran theropod remains from Romania that might not even be of birds – and the mid-late Eocene Eostega (probably a primitive gannet). In 1976, Colin James Oliver Harrison and Cyril Alexander Walker finally determined all those remains to be of pseudotooth birds. They also proposed that part of the supposed A. longipennis remains was actually from a distinct and slightly smaller genus and species, which they described in a monotypic genus as Macrodontopteryx oweni. In 1977, the same authors erected the genus Neptuniavis for supposed procellariiform tarsometatarsi also found on the Isle of Sheppey; they included two species there. Already however, eminent avian paleontologists such as Storrs L. Olson were voicing their reservation about this proliferation of taxa in no uncertain terms.[9]

2008: just Dasornis emuinus after all
Almost 150 years after the description of "L." emuinus, at the start of the 21st century, a rather well-preserved skull (lacking the beak) was discovered, once again in the Isle of Sheppey London Clay. This specimen – SMNK-PAL 4017 – was studied by Gerald Mayr at the Senckenberg Museum. He determined that all the large seabird bones from the London Clay bones belonged to a single species of pelagornithid. To this, the scientific name Dasornis emuinus applies, a novel combination of the oldest valid genus and species names ever used for these fossils. Indeed, the importance of this specimen can hardly be underestimated, for the holotype skull of Dasornis "londinensis" (which was used to establish the genus Dasornis) is so badly preserved that its status as a pseudotooth bird was debated as recently as 1985. Only the fossils named "Neptuniavis" minor were not of D. emuinus, but of the much smaller contemporary and sympatric pseudotooth bird Odontopteryx toliapica.[10]

"Dasornithidae"
The family Dasornithidae was established by Harrison and Walker in 1976 for Dasornis and its presumed relatives, which are however nowadays included in the former. As current scientists generally try to avoid monotypic taxa unless required by phylogeny, the Dasornithidae never were widely accepted; they are generally considered a junior synonym of the Pelagornithidae instead. And this seems to be quite correct indeed – as noted above, Pelagornis, the type genus of the Pelagornithidae, probably belongs to the same pseudotooth bird lineage as Dasornis and may even be descended from it. Thus, even if several families were recognized in the Odontopterygiformes, Pelagornis and Dasornis would almost certainly remain in the Pelagornithidae.[11]

Synonyms Edit

The junior synonyms of the genus Dasornis are thus:[12]

The junior synonyms of the species D. emuinus are:[13]

  • Argillornis emuinus (Bowerbank, 1854)
  • Argillornis longipennis Owen, 1878
  • Argillornis longipes Lambrecht, 1933 (lapsus)
  • "Dasornis londinensis" Owen, 1869 (nomen nudum)
  • Dasornis londinensis Owen, 1870
  • Dasornis londiniensis Lydekker, 1891 (unjustified emendation)
  • Lithornis emuinus Bowerbank, 1854
  • Megalornis emuianus Seeley, 1866 (lapsus)
  • Megalornis emuinus Lambrecht, 1921 (lapsus)
  • Neptuniavis miranda Harrison & C.A.Walker, 1977
  • Odontopteryx Owen, 1873

Other fossils perhaps belonging in Dasornis Edit

"Pseudodontornis" longidentata, described from a beak piece and a damaged atlas vertebra of what appears to have been a single individual, is yet another supposed pseudotooth bird species from the Early Eocene London Clay of the Isle of Sheppey. It may well be synonymous with D. emuinus too, or with Macrodontopteryx oweni if that is indeed a distinct species. This also applies to the Lutetian (Middle Eocene) material from Etterbeek (Belgium) which was at first assigned to Argillornis (as was the holotype skull of M. oweni); at least part of the supposed A. longipennis remains[14] – though not its syntype humerus pieces – does seem to be rather small for D. emuinus. Perhaps Gigantornis which is only known from pieces of a sternum found in Middle Eocene rocks in Nigeria also belongs in Dasornis; the sternum of D. emuinus remains unknown, but its size would have been a close match of the Nigerian fossil. Analysis of the unidentified large pelagornithid fossils from the Middle Eocene of Kpogamé-Hahotoé (Togo) which are provisionally termed "Aequornis traversei"[15] might shed light on this issue. The fairly large undescribed remains from the Late Paleocene/Early Eocene of the Ouled Abdoun Basin (Morocco) which have been provisionally termed "Odontopteryx gigas"[16] may in fact be from a small or juvenile Dasornis. The same applies to M. oweni – nonwithstanding that it is sometimes placed in Odontopteryx – considering it was for long included in Argillornis.[17]

Also provisionally assigned to Argillornis were some pelagornithid wing bone remains, specimens LACM 128462 and presumably also LACM 127875 from the Keasey and Pittsburg Bluff Formations of the Eocene/Oligocene boundary of Oregon. Whether this Pacific species was the same as the Atlantic D. emuinus is undetermined, but considering the age difference it is not all too likely and they may well belong to different genera. In that respect, the enigmatic Cyphornis magnus from the same region is most often assigned a Miocene age, but might actually be from around the Eo-Oligocene boundary as initially assumed; it or (if of Miocene age) an ancestor, or perhaps an ancestor of the Miocene genus Osteodontornis, make a more plausible candidate for the Oregon fossils. Lack of sufficient well-preserved remains have prevented more detailed study however. Similar in size and age to the present genus are some pseudotooth bird remains from Antarctica, namely a jaw piece from the Middle/Late Eocene of the La Meseta Formation of Seymour Island near the Drake Passage, and a Middle Eocene piece of a humerus shaft from Mount Discovery on the continent's Pacific side. Separated from the North Atlantic by a wide distance and the equatorial currents, even in the case of the Seymour Island specimen it is doubtful whether they could be referred to Dasornis, because the fossils are simply too fragmentary.[18]

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Bourdon (2005), Mayr (2009: p.59)
  2. ^ Brodkorb (1963: pp.248-249), Mlíkovský (2002: pp.78,82-83), Mayr (2009: p.56) – see "Systematics and taxonomy" for the misidentifications involved.
  3. ^ Mayr (2008), Clouter [2009ab]
  4. ^ Mayr (2008), contra Bourdon (2005).
  5. ^ Mayr (2008)
  6. ^ Owen (1878)
  7. ^ Woodward (1909): p.87), Brodkorb (1963: p.248-249, 1967: p.142-143), Mlíkovský (2002: pp.82-83), Mayr (2008, 2009: p.56)
  8. ^ Olson (1985: p.195)
  9. ^ Brodkorb (1963: pp.248-249, 1967: p.142), Olson (1985: pp.192-193,195), Mlíkovský (2002: pp.78,82-83), Mayr (2008, 2009: p.56)
  10. ^ Olson (1985: p.195), Mayr (2008). For a specimen photo, see Clouter [2009a].
  11. ^ Mlíkovský (2002: p.81), Mayr (2009: p.59)
  12. ^ Brodkorb (1963: p.248, 1967: p.142), Mlíkovský (2002: p.82), Mayr (2008)
  13. ^ Brodkorb (1963: p.248, 1967: p.143), Mlíkovský (2002: pp.82-83), Mayr (2008)
  14. ^ E.g. the humerus fragments BMNH A5 and BMNH A8 or the proximal left ulna piece BMNH A94: Goedert (1989)
  15. ^ Published in a thesis and hence a nomen nudum: ICZN (1999)
  16. ^ "Odontopteryx n. sp. 2" of Bourdon (2005); "O. gigas" was published in a thesis and hence is a nomen nudum: ICZN (1999)
  17. ^ Brodkorb (1963: pp.248-249), Olson (1985: p.196), Goedert (1989), Bourdon (2006), Mayr (2008, 2009: p.56), Mlíkovský (2009)
  18. ^ Olson (1985: pp.196,199), Tonni & Tambussi (1985), Goedert (1989), Stilwell et al. (1998), González-Barba et al. (2002), Mayr (2009: pp.57-58)

Bibliography Edit

  • Bourdon, Estelle (2005): Osteological evidence for sister group relationship between pseudo-toothed birds (Aves: Odontopterygiformes) and waterfowls (Anseriformes). Naturwissenschaften 92(12): 586–591. doi:10.1007/s00114-005-0047-0 (HTML abstract) Electronic supplement (requires subscription)
  • Bourdon, Estelle (2006): L'avifaune du Paléogène des phosphates du Maroc et du Togo: diversité, systématique et apports à la connaissance de la diversification des oiseaux modernes (Neornithes) ["Paleogene avifauna of phosphates of Morocco and Togo: diversity, systematics and contributions to the knowledge of the diversification of the Neornithes"]. Doctoral thesis, Muséum national d'histoire naturelle [in French].
  • Brodkorb, Pierce (1963): Catalogue of fossil birds. Part 1 (Archaeopterygiformes through Ardeiformes). Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences 7(4): 179–293. PDF or JPEG fulltext 2007-03-11 at the Wayback Machine
  • Brodkorb, Pierce (1967): Catalogue of Fossil Birds: Part 3 (Ralliformes, Ichthyornithiformes, Charadriiformes). Bulletin of the Florida State Museum 11(3): 99-220. PDF or JPEG fulltext 2008-02-23 at the Wayback Machine
  • Clouter, Fred [2009a]: Sheppey Fossils – Birds. Retrieved 2009-AUG-05.
  • Clouter, Fred [2009b]: Sheppey Fossils – Birds 2. Retrieved 2009-AUG-05.
  • Goedert, James L. (1989): Giant Late Eocene Marine Birds (Pelecaniformes: Pelagornithidae) from Northwestern Oregon. J. Paleontol. 63(6): 939–944. Abstract and first page text
  • González-Barba, Gerardo; Schwennicke, Tobias; Goedert, James L. & Barnes, Lawrence G. (2002): Earliest Pacific Basin record of the Pelagornithidae (Aves, Pelecaniformes). J. Vertebr. Paleontol. 22(2): 722–725. DOI:10.1671/0272-4634(2002)022[0722:EPBROT]2.0.CO;2 HTML abstract
  • International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) (1999): International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (4th ed.). International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature, London. ISBN 0-85301-006-4
  • Mayr, Gerald (2008): A skull of the giant bony-toothed bird Dasornis (Aves: Pelagornithidae) from the Lower Eocene of the Isle of Sheppey. Palaeontology 51(5): 1107–1116. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2008.00798.x (HTML abstract)
  • Mayr, Gerald (2009): Paleogene Fossil Birds. Springer-Verlag, Heidelberg & New York. ISBN 3-540-89627-9
  • Mlíkovský, Jirí (2002): Cenozoic Birds of the World, Part 1: Europe. Ninox Press, Prague. ISBN 80-901105-3-8
  • Mlíkovský, Jirí (2009): Evolution of the Cenozoic marine avifaunas of Europe. Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums Wien A 111: 357–374
  • Olson, Storrs L. (1985): The Fossil Record of Birds. In: Farner, D.S; King, J.R. & Parkes, Kenneth C. (eds.): Avian Biology 8: 79-252. PDF fulltext
  • Owen, Richard (1878):   On Argillornis longipennis, Ow., a large Bird of flight, from the Eocene Clay of Sheppey.. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 34: 124–130.
  • Stilwell, Jeffrey D; Jones, Craig M; Levy, Richard H. & Harwood, David M. (1998): First fossil bird from East Antarctica. Antarctic Journal of the United States 33(1): 12–16. PDF fulltext
  • Tonni, Eduardo Pedro & Tambussi, Claudia Patricia (1985): Nuevos restos de Odontopterygia (Aves: Pelecaniformes) del Terciario temprano de Antártida ["New pseudotooth bird remains from the Early Tertiary of Antarctica"]. Ameghiniana 21(2-4): 121-124 [Spanish with English abstract]. HTML abstract
  • Woodward, Arthur Smith (ed.) (1909): A Guide to the Fossil Mammals and Birds in the Department of Geology and Palaeontology of the British Museum (Natural History) (9th ed.). William Clowes and Sons Ltd., London. Fulltext at the Internet Archive

dasornis, confused, with, dasyornis, neptuniavis, redirects, here, minor, odontopteryx, genus, prehistoric, pseudotooth, birds, these, were, probably, rather, close, relatives, either, pelicans, storks, waterfowl, here, placed, order, odontopterygiformes, acco. Not to be confused with Dasyornis Neptuniavis redirects here For N minor see Odontopteryx Dasornis is a genus of the prehistoric pseudotooth birds These were probably rather close relatives of either pelicans and storks or of waterfowl and are here placed in the order Odontopterygiformes to account for this uncertainty 1 DasornisTemporal range Early Eocene but see text 51 50 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Reconstructed skeletonScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder OdontopterygiformesFamily PelagornithidaeGenus DasornisOwen 1870Type species Dasornis emuinusBowerbank 1854Species D emuinus 1854 D toliapica 1873 D abdoun 2010 SynonymsNumerous see textAlmost all known material of this bird is from some 50 million years ago Ma and has been recovered from the Ypresian Early Eocene London Clay of the Isle of Sheppey England The exception are a few approximately 45 Ma old remains from the Lutetian Middle Eocene MP11 13 of Etterbeek Belgium that are only tentatively included here and some even more conjectural remains from outside Europe see below 2 Contents 1 Description 2 Systematics and taxonomy 2 1 Synonyms 3 Other fossils perhaps belonging in Dasornis 4 Footnotes 5 BibliographyDescription Edit Skeleton from belowLike those of its relatives the thin walled bones of Dasornis broke easily and thus very few fossils though still far more than of the average pseudotooth bird genus are in decent condition Among these is a superbly preserved partial skull that has been of crucial importance in sorting out the convoluted synonymy of this genus Apart from that and another not quite as well preserved partial skull however a number of beak and cranium pieces as well as a few broken remains of wing and tarsometatarsus bones make up the known remains of Dasornis The most tell tale characteristic of the present genus are the combination of Paleogene age and huge size But given the fragmented state of these it is not at all clear whether the genus was restricted to the North Atlantic and perhaps the adjacent Paratethys or occurred also in the Pacific and in the Southern Hemisphere where fossils of a similar size were found see below 3 This genus belongs to the group of huge pseudotooth birds with wingspans in excess of 5 m 16 ft and probably as much as 6 m 20 ft The complete head and bill probably measured almost 45 cm 1 48 ft in life the eye socket had a diameter of 55 millimetres 2 2 in and the humerus at its distal end was about 35 millimetres 1 4 in wide The well preserved skull fossil shows deep grooves along the underside of the upper bill with pits to accommodate the lower bill s teeth Thus only the upper teeth were visible when the bird closed its bill Dasornis resembles the much smaller Odontopteryx in having a jugal arch that is mid sized tapering and stout behind the orbital process of the prefrontal bone unlike in the large Neogene Osteodontornis Also its paroccipital process is much elongated back and downwards again like in Odontopteryx but unlike in Pseudodontornis longirostris Further traits in which Dasornis agreed with Odontopteryx and differed from Pelagornis a contemporary of Osteodontornis are a deep and long handward pointing pneumatic foramen in the fossa pneumotricipitalis of the humerus a latissimus dorsi muscle attachment site on the humerus that consists of two distinct segments instead of a single long and a large knob that extends along the ulna where the ligamentum collaterale ventrale attached As the traits as found in Odontopteryx and Dasornis are probably plesiomorphic they cannot be used to argue for a closer relationship between the two Paleogene genera than either had with Osteodontornis and or Pelagornis 4 Systematics and taxonomy EditOnly a single species Dasornis emuinus is accepted today However it has a very convoluted synonymy with its fossil remains assigned to no less than six genera of which two were invalid junior homonyms and divided between at least four species excluding spelling errors and invalid corrections that were variously moved between these genera for almost 150 years 5 1854 1890 Lithornis emuinus Megalornis of Seeley Dasornis and Argillornis The first fossil of D emuinus a piece of right humerus shaft was found in the Ypresian Early Eocene London Clay of the Isle of Sheppey England It was misidentified as a tibiotarsus of the paleognath Lithornis and described as L emuinus by James Scott Bowerbank in 1854 Harry Govier Seeley recognized this error in 1866 and established the genus Megalornis though he misspelled the specific name as emuianus However the genus name he chose had already been used for some of the great herons Ardea Richard Owen established the genera Dasornis in 1870 and Argillornis in 1878 6 for respectively a broken skull and two humerus ends that were found in the same deposits Some authors who claim he had already erected the former genus in 1869 but in that year he only used the names informally in his brief initial report on the newly discovered skull Misled by the skull s large size and perhaps overly eager to be the first to describe the remains of a European moa Owen was the foremost authority on these New Zealand endemics at that time he placed Dasornis in the Dinornithidae Argillornis on the other hand was recognized early on as some sort of aquatic bird but its immense size puzzled paleontologists to no little extent 7 1891 1985 spelling errors Neptuniavis and completely unrealistic 8 taxonomy Subsequent authors noting that it was quite obviously not a paleognath ratite placed Dasornis in the Gastornithidae Richard Lydekker in 1891 proposed to rename Owen s D londinensis to D londiniensis and later that year wanted to change Dasornis to Dasyornis But the altered specific name was not in accordance with the rules of zoological nomenclature and neither was the genus name he chose and which moreover had already been used earlier by Nicholas Aylward Vigors and Thomas Horsfield for the bristlebirds In 1921 Kalman Lambrecht corrected Seeley s Megalornis emuianus to emuinus and in 1933 he misspelled Owen s A longipennis as longipes Pierce Brodkorb resolved the Megalornis homonymy in 1963 by merging M emuinus with A longipennis combining the older specific name emuinus and the then valid genus name Argillornis However he rather inexplicably allied Argillornis with the enigmatic Mesozoic Elopteryx nopcsai a sort of wastebin taxon for Late Cretaceous maniraptoran theropod remains from Romania that might not even be of birds and the mid late Eocene Eostega probably a primitive gannet In 1976 Colin James Oliver Harrison and Cyril Alexander Walker finally determined all those remains to be of pseudotooth birds They also proposed that part of the supposed A longipennis remains was actually from a distinct and slightly smaller genus and species which they described in a monotypic genus as Macrodontopteryx oweni In 1977 the same authors erected the genus Neptuniavis for supposed procellariiform tarsometatarsi also found on the Isle of Sheppey they included two species there Already however eminent avian paleontologists such as Storrs L Olson were voicing their reservation about this proliferation of taxa in no uncertain terms 9 2008 just Dasornis emuinus after all Almost 150 years after the description of L emuinus at the start of the 21st century a rather well preserved skull lacking the beak was discovered once again in the Isle of Sheppey London Clay This specimen SMNK PAL 4017 was studied by Gerald Mayr at the Senckenberg Museum He determined that all the large seabird bones from the London Clay bones belonged to a single species of pelagornithid To this the scientific name Dasornis emuinus applies a novel combination of the oldest valid genus and species names ever used for these fossils Indeed the importance of this specimen can hardly be underestimated for the holotype skull of Dasornis londinensis which was used to establish the genus Dasornis is so badly preserved that its status as a pseudotooth bird was debated as recently as 1985 Only the fossils named Neptuniavis minor were not of D emuinus but of the much smaller contemporary and sympatric pseudotooth bird Odontopteryx toliapica 10 Dasornithidae The family Dasornithidae was established by Harrison and Walker in 1976 for Dasornis and its presumed relatives which are however nowadays included in the former As current scientists generally try to avoid monotypic taxa unless required by phylogeny the Dasornithidae never were widely accepted they are generally considered a junior synonym of the Pelagornithidae instead And this seems to be quite correct indeed as noted above Pelagornis the type genus of the Pelagornithidae probably belongs to the same pseudotooth bird lineage as Dasornis and may even be descended from it Thus even if several families were recognized in the Odontopterygiformes Pelagornis and Dasornis would almost certainly remain in the Pelagornithidae 11 Synonyms Edit The junior synonyms of the genus Dasornis are thus 12 Argillornis Owen 1878 Dasornis Owen 1869 nomen nudum Dasyornis Lydekker 1891 non Vigors amp Horsfield 1836 preoccupied Megalornis Seeley 1866 non Gray 1841 preoccupied Neptuniavis Harrison amp C A Walker 1977The junior synonyms of the species D emuinus are 13 Argillornis emuinus Bowerbank 1854 Argillornis longipennis Owen 1878 Argillornis longipes Lambrecht 1933 lapsus Dasornis londinensis Owen 1869 nomen nudum Dasornis londinensis Owen 1870 Dasornis londiniensis Lydekker 1891 unjustified emendation Lithornis emuinus Bowerbank 1854 Megalornis emuianus Seeley 1866 lapsus Megalornis emuinus Lambrecht 1921 lapsus Neptuniavis miranda Harrison amp C A Walker 1977 Odontopteryx Owen 1873Other fossils perhaps belonging in Dasornis Edit Pseudodontornis longidentata described from a beak piece and a damaged atlas vertebra of what appears to have been a single individual is yet another supposed pseudotooth bird species from the Early Eocene London Clay of the Isle of Sheppey It may well be synonymous with D emuinus too or with Macrodontopteryx oweni if that is indeed a distinct species This also applies to the Lutetian Middle Eocene material from Etterbeek Belgium which was at first assigned to Argillornis as was the holotype skull of M oweni at least part of the supposed A longipennis remains 14 though not its syntype humerus pieces does seem to be rather small for D emuinus Perhaps Gigantornis which is only known from pieces of a sternum found in Middle Eocene rocks in Nigeria also belongs in Dasornis the sternum of D emuinus remains unknown but its size would have been a close match of the Nigerian fossil Analysis of the unidentified large pelagornithid fossils from the Middle Eocene of Kpogame Hahotoe Togo which are provisionally termed Aequornis traversei 15 might shed light on this issue The fairly large undescribed remains from the Late Paleocene Early Eocene of the Ouled Abdoun Basin Morocco which have been provisionally termed Odontopteryx gigas 16 may in fact be from a small or juvenile Dasornis The same applies to M oweni nonwithstanding that it is sometimes placed in Odontopteryx considering it was for long included in Argillornis 17 Also provisionally assigned to Argillornis were some pelagornithid wing bone remains specimens LACM 128462 and presumably also LACM 127875 from the Keasey and Pittsburg Bluff Formations of the Eocene Oligocene boundary of Oregon Whether this Pacific species was the same as the Atlantic D emuinus is undetermined but considering the age difference it is not all too likely and they may well belong to different genera In that respect the enigmatic Cyphornis magnus from the same region is most often assigned a Miocene age but might actually be from around the Eo Oligocene boundary as initially assumed it or if of Miocene age an ancestor or perhaps an ancestor of the Miocene genus Osteodontornis make a more plausible candidate for the Oregon fossils Lack of sufficient well preserved remains have prevented more detailed study however Similar in size and age to the present genus are some pseudotooth bird remains from Antarctica namely a jaw piece from the Middle Late Eocene of the La Meseta Formation of Seymour Island near the Drake Passage and a Middle Eocene piece of a humerus shaft from Mount Discovery on the continent s Pacific side Separated from the North Atlantic by a wide distance and the equatorial currents even in the case of the Seymour Island specimen it is doubtful whether they could be referred to Dasornis because the fossils are simply too fragmentary 18 Footnotes Edit Bourdon 2005 Mayr 2009 p 59 Brodkorb 1963 pp 248 249 Mlikovsky 2002 pp 78 82 83 Mayr 2009 p 56 see Systematics and taxonomy for the misidentifications involved Mayr 2008 Clouter 2009ab Mayr 2008 contra Bourdon 2005 Mayr 2008 Owen 1878 Woodward 1909 p 87 Brodkorb 1963 p 248 249 1967 p 142 143 Mlikovsky 2002 pp 82 83 Mayr 2008 2009 p 56 Olson 1985 p 195 Brodkorb 1963 pp 248 249 1967 p 142 Olson 1985 pp 192 193 195 Mlikovsky 2002 pp 78 82 83 Mayr 2008 2009 p 56 Olson 1985 p 195 Mayr 2008 For a specimen photo see Clouter 2009a Mlikovsky 2002 p 81 Mayr 2009 p 59 Brodkorb 1963 p 248 1967 p 142 Mlikovsky 2002 p 82 Mayr 2008 Brodkorb 1963 p 248 1967 p 143 Mlikovsky 2002 pp 82 83 Mayr 2008 E g the humerus fragments BMNH A5 and BMNH A8 or the proximal left ulna piece BMNH A94 Goedert 1989 Published in a thesis and hence a nomen nudum ICZN 1999 Odontopteryx n sp 2 of Bourdon 2005 O gigas was published in a thesis and hence is a nomen nudum ICZN 1999 Brodkorb 1963 pp 248 249 Olson 1985 p 196 Goedert 1989 Bourdon 2006 Mayr 2008 2009 p 56 Mlikovsky 2009 Olson 1985 pp 196 199 Tonni amp Tambussi 1985 Goedert 1989 Stilwell et al 1998 Gonzalez Barba et al 2002 Mayr 2009 pp 57 58 Bibliography EditBourdon Estelle 2005 Osteological evidence for sister group relationship between pseudo toothed birds Aves Odontopterygiformes and waterfowls Anseriformes Naturwissenschaften 92 12 586 591 doi 10 1007 s00114 005 0047 0 HTML abstract Electronic supplement requires subscription Bourdon Estelle 2006 L avifaune du Paleogene des phosphates du Maroc et du Togo diversite systematique et apports a la connaissance de la diversification des oiseaux modernes Neornithes Paleogene avifauna of phosphates of Morocco and Togo diversity systematics and contributions to the knowledge of the diversification of the Neornithes Doctoral thesis Museum national d histoire naturelle in French HTML abstract Brodkorb Pierce 1963 Catalogue of fossil birds Part 1 Archaeopterygiformes through Ardeiformes Bulletin of the Florida State Museum Biological Sciences 7 4 179 293 PDF or JPEG fulltext Archived 2007 03 11 at the Wayback Machine Brodkorb Pierce 1967 Catalogue of Fossil Birds Part 3 Ralliformes Ichthyornithiformes Charadriiformes Bulletin of the Florida State Museum 11 3 99 220 PDF or JPEG fulltext Archived 2008 02 23 at the Wayback Machine Clouter Fred 2009a Sheppey Fossils Birds Retrieved 2009 AUG 05 Clouter Fred 2009b Sheppey Fossils Birds 2 Retrieved 2009 AUG 05 Goedert James L 1989 Giant Late Eocene Marine Birds Pelecaniformes Pelagornithidae from Northwestern Oregon J Paleontol 63 6 939 944 Abstract and first page text Gonzalez Barba Gerardo Schwennicke Tobias Goedert James L amp Barnes Lawrence G 2002 Earliest Pacific Basin record of the Pelagornithidae Aves Pelecaniformes J Vertebr Paleontol 22 2 722 725 DOI 10 1671 0272 4634 2002 022 0722 EPBROT 2 0 CO 2 HTML abstract International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature ICZN 1999 International Code of Zoological Nomenclature 4th ed International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature London ISBN 0 85301 006 4 HTML fulltext Mayr Gerald 2008 A skull of the giant bony toothed bird Dasornis Aves Pelagornithidae from the Lower Eocene of the Isle of Sheppey Palaeontology 51 5 1107 1116 doi 10 1111 j 1475 4983 2008 00798 x HTML abstract Mayr Gerald 2009 Paleogene Fossil Birds Springer Verlag Heidelberg amp New York ISBN 3 540 89627 9 Mlikovsky Jiri 2002 Cenozoic Birds of the World Part 1 Europe Ninox Press Prague ISBN 80 901105 3 8 PDF fulltext Mlikovsky Jiri 2009 Evolution of the Cenozoic marine avifaunas of Europe Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums Wien A 111 357 374 PDF fulltext Olson Storrs L 1985 The Fossil Record of Birds In Farner D S King J R amp Parkes Kenneth C eds Avian Biology 8 79 252 PDF fulltext Owen Richard 1878 On Argillornis longipennis Ow a large Bird of flight from the Eocene Clay of Sheppey Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 34 124 130 Stilwell Jeffrey D Jones Craig M Levy Richard H amp Harwood David M 1998 First fossil bird from East Antarctica Antarctic Journal of the United States 33 1 12 16 PDF fulltext Tonni Eduardo Pedro amp Tambussi Claudia Patricia 1985 Nuevos restos de Odontopterygia Aves Pelecaniformes del Terciario temprano de Antartida New pseudotooth bird remains from the Early Tertiary of Antarctica Ameghiniana 21 2 4 121 124 Spanish with English abstract HTML abstract Woodward Arthur Smith ed 1909 A Guide to the Fossil Mammals and Birds in the Department of Geology and Palaeontology of the British Museum Natural History 9th ed William Clowes and Sons Ltd London Fulltext at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dasornis amp oldid 1126670699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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