Systematics and phylogeny of the Zygodactylidae (Aves, Neognathae) with description of a new species from the early Eocene of Wyoming, USA

PeerJ. 2018 Jun 25:6:e4950. doi: 10.7717/peerj.4950. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Zygodactylidae are an extinct lineage of perching birds characterized by distinct morphologies of the foot and wing elements. Although the clade has a complex taxonomic history, current hypotheses place Zygodactylidae as the sister taxon to Passeriformes (i.e., songbirds). Given the rather sparse fossil record of early passeriforms, the description of zygodactylid taxa is important for inferring potentially ancestral states in the largest radiation of living birds (i.e., the ∼6,000 species of extant passeriforms). Despite the exceptional preservation of many specimens and considerable species diversity in Zygodactylidae, the relationships among species have not been previously evaluated in a phylogenetic context. Herein, we review the fossil record of Zygodactylidae from North America and describe five new well-preserved fossils from the early Eocene Green River Formation of Wyoming. Two specimens are identified as representing a new species and the first records of the taxon Zygodactylus outside Europe. Anatomical comparisons with previously named taxa and the results of phylogenetic analysis including newly described specimens and previously named zygodactylid taxa provide the first hypothesis of the species-level relationships among zygodactylids. The monophyly of Zygodactylidae is supported in these new analyses. However, the monophyly of Primozygodactylus and the taxonomic distinction between Zygodactylus and Eozygodactylus remain unresolved and would likely benefit from the description of additional specimens.

Keywords: Avian evolution; Eozygodactylus; Fossil birds; Green River Formation; Primoscens; Primozygodactylus; Stem passeriform; Zygodactylus; Zygodactylus grandei.

Grants and funding

Project work by Julia Clarke and Aj Debee was supported by the National Science Foundation (EAR 0719943/ 0938199 to Julia Clarke) and the University of Texas at Austin. N. Adam Smith was funded by a postdoctoral fellowship from the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent; NSF EF-0905606) and the John Caldwell Meeker Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Field Museum of Natural History. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.