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Two Early Cretaceous Fossils Document Transitional Stages in Alvarezsaurian Dinosaur Evolution

  • Xing Xu*
  • , Jonah Choiniere
  • , Qingwei Tan
  • , Roger B.J. Benson
  • , James Clark
  • , Corwin Sullivan
  • , Qi Zhao
  • , Fenglu Han
  • , Qingyu Ma
  • , Yiming He
  • , Shuo Wang
  • , Hai Xing
  • , Lin Tan
  • *此作品的通讯作者
  • CAS - Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology
  • Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Nanjing University
  • University of the Witwatersrand
  • American Museum of Natural History
  • Long Hao Institute of Geology and Paleontology
  • University of Oxford
  • George Washington University
  • Yunnan University
  • University of Alberta
  • Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museum
  • China University of Geosciences, Wuhan
  • Capital Normal University
  • Beijing Academy of Science and Technology

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

摘要

Highly specialized animals are often difficult to place phylogenetically. The Late Cretaceous members of Alvarezsauria represent such an example, having been posited as members of various theropod lineages, including birds [1–11]. A 70-million-year ghost lineage exists between them and the Late Jurassic putative alvarezsaurian Haplocheirus [12], which preserves so few derived features that its membership in Alvarezsauria has recently been questioned [13]. If Haplocheirus is indeed an alvarezsaurian, then the 70-million-year gap between Haplocheirus and other alvarezsaurians represents the longest temporal hiatus within the fossil record of any theropod subgroup [14]. Here we report two new alvarezsaurians from the Early Cretaceous of Western China that document successive, transitional stages in alvarezsaurian evolution. They provide further support for Haplocheirus as an alvarezsaurian and for alvarezsaurians as basal maniraptorans. Furthermore, they suggest that the early biogeographic history of the Alvarezsauria involved dispersals from Asia to other continents. The new specimens are temporally, morphologically, and functionally intermediate between Haplocheirus and other known alvarezsaurians and provide a striking example of the evolutionary transition from a typical theropod forelimb configuration (i.e., the relatively long arm and three-digit grasping hand of typical tetanuran form in early-branching alvarezsaurians) to a highly specialized one (i.e., the highly modified and shortened arm and one-digit digging hand of Late Cretaceous parvicursorines such as Linhenykus [1, 15]). Comprehensive analyses incorporating data from these new finds show that the specialized alvarezsaurian forelimb morphology evolved slowly and in a mosaic fashion during the Cretaceous. Xu et al. report two new Early Cretaceous alvarezsaurian theropods representing transitional stages in alvarezsaurian evolution. The analyses indicate that the evolutionary transition from a typical theropod forelimb configuration to a highly specialized one was slow and occurred in a mosaic fashion during the Cretaceous.

源语言英语
页(从-至)2853-2860.e3
期刊Current Biology
28
17
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 10 9月 2018
已对外发布

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