Wednesday, February 12, 2025

[PaleoOrnithology • 2025] Baminornis zhenghensis • Earliest Short-tailed Bird from the Late Jurassic of China

 

 Baminornis zhenghensis
Chen, M. Wang, Dong, G. Zhou, X. Xu, Deng, L. Xu, Zhang, L. Wang, Du, G. Lin, M. Lin & Z. Zhou, 2025  
  
Life reconstruction by Zhao Chuang

Abstract
Recent macroevolutionary studies predict a diversification of early birds during the Jurassic period, but the unquestionable Jurassic bird fossil record is limited to Archaeopteryx, which has also been referred to deinonychosaurian dinosaurs by some analyses. Although they have feathered wings, the known Jurassic birds are more similar to non-avialan theropods in having the ancestral long reptilian tail. This is in stark contrast to most Cretaceous and crownward taxa, which have a short tail that terminates in a compound bone called the pygostyle. Here we report on the oldest short-tailed avialan, Baminornis zhenghensis gen. et sp. nov., from the recently discovered Late Jurassic Zhenghe Fauna, which fills a noticeable spatio-temporal gap in the earliest branching avialan fossil record. B. zhenghensis exhibits a unique combination of derived ornithothoracine-like pectoral and pelvic girdles and plesiomorphic non-avialan maniraptoran hand, demonstrating mosaic evolution along stem avialan line. An avialan furcula collected from the same locality is referrable to ornithuromorphs on the basis of our morphometric and phylogenetic analyses. These newly discovered fossils demonstrate the early appearance of highly derived bird features, and together with an anchiornithine fossil from the same locality, they suggest an earlier origin of birds and a radiation of early birds in the Jurassic.


 Baminornis zhenghensis gen. et sp. nov.




 Baminornis zhenghensis from the Zhenghe Fauna.
Life reconstruction by Zhao Chuang


Runsheng Chen, Min Wang, Liping Dong, Guowu Zhou, Xing Xu, Ke Deng, Liming Xu, Chi Zhang, Linchang Wang, Honggang Du, Ganmin Lin, Min Lin  and Zhonghe Zhou. 2025. Earliest Short-tailed Bird from the Late Jurassic of China. Nature. 638, 441–448. DOI: doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08410-z