Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1

262 ■ CHAPTER 14 The History of Life


BIODIVERSITY


Eosinopteryx

Roadrunner

Dromaeosaurids

Troodontids

Aurornis

Anchiornis

Xiaotingia

Archaeopteryx

Other early birds

Node separating
early birds from
dinosaurs

Xiaotingia

Archaeopteryx

Aurornis

Contrary to the tree that arose from his
first study, Godefroit’s second tree places
Archaeopteryx back on its roost in the bird
family, although no longer as the oldest bird.
That place belongs to Aurornis, says Godefroit
(Figure 14.14).
Still, the debate is not over. “Of course we need
more evidence and more work,” says Xu. “Many
of these new species are a possible candidate for

4 cm4 cm

Head

Forelimbs
Tail

Hind limbs

Figure 14.13


A namesake fossil, Aurornis xui,
illuminates the dinosaur-bird transition

Figure 14.14


The early birds


Godefroit’s 2013 study places Archaeopteryx and


Xiaotingia with birds rather than dinosaurs, as in


the traditional dinosaur-bird evolutionary tree


(see Figure 14.6, top). But it places Aurornis as the


earliest known bird on the evolutionary tree.


Q1: Is Xiaotingia an earlier or later bird than
Archaeopteryx in this tree?

Q2: If a future study, based on more fossils
or new measurements, placed Archaeopteryx
back with dinosaurs, would this suggest
that birds are not related to dinosaurs? Why
or why not?

Q3: If you were to create an evolutionary
tree of modern birds, where would you
expect to place the roadrunner (judging by
its appearance in this figure) as compared
to a house sparrow or pigeon?

thousand characteristics of skeletons of 101
species of dinosaurs and birds. “It’s very impres-
sive,” paleontologist Mike Lee at the South
Australian Museum told National Geographic.
“They considered more than twice as much
anatomical information as even the best previ-
ous analyses.”

4 cm

Head

Forelimbs

Tail
Hind limbs

Figure 14.12


Another feathered dinosaur, Eosinopteryx
brevipenna, supports Xu’s new tree
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