A species-level phylogeny of the Cretaceous Hesperornithiformes (Aves: Ornithuromorpha): implications for body size evolution amongst the earliest diving birds

2016 
Despite extensive discoveries across the globe over the past two centuries, little phylogenetic work has been done on the Hesperornithiformes. Spanning the late Early to Late Cretaceous, hesperornithiforms are one of the most diverse groups of Mesozoic birds in terms of both their geographical distribution and the wide differences in body size and diving specializations. This study presents the first phylogenetic analysis of the Hesperornithiformes that includes a majority of the described taxa, enabling the first detailed look at evolutionary relationships within the clade. The results of this study support the monophyly of the Hesperornithiformes, which is recovered as the sister clade to the avian crown group, Neornithes. Within the Hesperornithiformes, the Brodavidae and Hesperornithidae are monophyletic while the Baptornithidae are polyphyletic. Little evidence of species-level taxonomic differentiation is found within Hesperornis, with many species indistinguishable from Hesperornis regalis. Evoluti...
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