Eogruidae

Summary

Eogruidae (also spelled Eogruiidae in some publications) is a family of large, flightless birds that inhabited Asia from the Eocene to Pliocene epochs. Related to modern ostriches, it was formerly thought to be related to cranes, limpkins and trumpeters and that the similarities with ostriches were due to similar speciations to cursoriality, with both groups showing reduced numbers of toes to two in some taxa.[1][2][3] It has been suggested that competition from true ostriches has caused the extinction of these birds,[2][3] though this has never been formally tested and several ostrich taxa do occur in the late Cenozoic of Asia[4] and some species do occur in areas where ostrich fossils have also been found.[1] It has been suggested that the family is paraphyletic, with Ergilornithidae more closely related to modern ostriches than to Eogrus or Sonogrus.[5]

Eogruidae
Temporal range: Late Eocene–Early Pliocene
Detailed depiction of Ergilornis in its habitat
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Infraclass: Palaeognathae
Order: Struthioniformes
Family: Eogruidae
Wetmore, 1934
Genera
  • Eogrus
  • Sonogrus
  • Ergilornithinae
    • Amphipelargus
    • Ergilornis
    • Sinoergilornis
    • Urmiornis

Description edit

Most eogruids are known from rather sparse remains, mostly the tarso-metatarsals and toes. The former are generally slender with a distinct crest along the lateral side of the plantar surface. The trochlea for the second toe shows a progressive reduction along the various taxa, culminating in its utter absence in Amphipelargus.[4][3]

Other skeletal remains are rare. Wing elements are known in a few taxa; these are generally highly reduced, suggesting that these birds were flightless. The exception appears to be Eogrus itself, which does not show much phalange reduction and hypothetically could still fly,[4] though the rest of the postcranial skeleton is already specialised for cursoriality.[2][3]

Classification edit

Eogruids were formerly considered to be Gruiformes within the crane-limpkin-trumpeter line, Gruoidea, the exception being Olson 1985 which declared them to be stem-ostriches.[4] A study in 2021 based on newly described remains found that eogruids and the related Ergilornithidae are indeed members of Struthoniformes.[6]

More derived taxa such as Ergilornis and Amphipelargus were sometimes classified as a separate family, Ergilornithidae, but they are now generally accepted to be a subfamily within Eogruidae.[1] Eogruids are rather similar to Geranoididae, a clade of similar flightless gruiforms from North America and Europe, and both groups have occasionally been classified as sister taxa. Recently geranoidids have been recovered as basal to the rest of Gruoidea, however, while eogruids are sister-taxa to cranes.[7]

Taxonomy edit

There is some contention in regards to ergilornithine genera, particularly Amphipelargus and Urmiornis, which have assimilated each other's species from study to study. The most recent consensus is that nearly all Neogene eogruid remains belong to Urmiornis, while a few western Eurasian taxa can be referred to as Amphipelargus.[1]

  • Eogrus
    • Eogrus aeola
    • Eogrus crudus
    • Eogrus turanicus
  • Sonogrus
    • Sonogrus gregalis
  • Proergilornis
  • Ergilornithinae
    • Ergilornis
      • Ergilornis rapidus
      • Ergilornis minor (Synonym/s - "Proergilornis")
    • Amphipelargus
      • Amphipelargus majori
      • Amphipelargus cracrafti
      • †An unnamed species possibly within this genus.[1]
    • Urmiornis
      • Urmiornis brodkorbi
      • Urmiornis dzabghanensis
      • Urmiornis maraghanus
      • Urmiornis orientalis
      • Urmiornis ukrainus

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Zelenkov, Nikita; Boev, Zlatozar; Lazaridis, Georgios (2016). "A large ergilornithine (Aves, Gruiformes) from the Late Miocene of the Balkan Peninsula". Paläontologische Zeitschrift. 90 (1): 145–151. Bibcode:2016PalZ...90..145Z. doi:10.1007/s12542-015-0279-z. S2CID 131264199.
  2. ^ a b c Kurochkin, E.N. 1976. A survey of the Paleogene birds of Asia. Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology 27:75-86.
  3. ^ a b c d Kurochkin, E.N. 1981. New representatives and evolution of two archaic gruiform families in Eurasia. Transactions of the Soviet-Mongolian Paleontologial Expedition 15:59-85.
  4. ^ a b c d Mayr, G. (2009). Paleogene fossil birds. Springer.
  5. ^ Mayr, Gerald; Zelenkov, Nikita (2021-11-13). "Extinct crane-like birds (Eogruidae and Ergilornithidae) from the Cenozoic of Central Asia are indeed ostrich precursors". Ornithology. 138 (4): ukab048. doi:10.1093/ornithology/ukab048. ISSN 0004-8038.
  6. ^ Mayr, G. & Zelenkov, N. (2021) Extinct crane-like birds (Eogruidae and Ergilornithidae) from the Cenozoic of Central Asia are indeed ostrich precursors. Ornithology, https://doi.org/10.1093/ornithology/ukab048
  7. ^ Mayr, Gerald (2016). "On the taxonomy and osteology of the Early Eocene North American Geranoididae (Aves, Gruoidea)". Swiss Journal of Palaeontology. 135 (2): 315–325. Bibcode:2016SwJP..135..315M. doi:10.1007/s13358-016-0117-2. S2CID 87692869.