A tiny, long-legged raptor from the early Oligocene of Poland may be the earliest bird-eating diurnal bird of prey
Abstract
We report a small hawk-like diurnal bird from the early Oligocene (30-31 million years ago) of Poland. Aviraptor longicrus, n. gen. et sp. is of a size comparable with the smallest extant Accipitridae. The new species is characterized by very long legs, which, together with the small size, suggest an avivorous (bird-eating) feeding behavior. Overall, the new species resembles extant sparrowhawks (Accipiter spp.) in the length proportions of the major limb bones, even though some features indicate that it convergently acquired an Accipiter-like morphology. Most specialized avivores amongst extant accipitrids belong to the taxon Accipiter and predominantly predate small forest passerines; the smallest Accipiter species also hunts hummingbirds. Occurrence of a possibly avivorous raptor in the early Oligocene of Europe is particularly notable because A. longicrus coexisted with the earliest Northern Hemispheric passerines and modern-type hummingbirds. We therefore hypothesize that the diversification of these birds towards the early Oligocene may have triggered the evolution of small-sized avivorous raptors, and the new fossil may exemplify one of the earliest examples of avian predator/prey coevolution.
- Publication:
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The Science of Nature
- Pub Date:
- December 2020
- DOI:
- 10.1007/s00114-020-01703-z
- Bibcode:
- 2020SciNa.107...48M
- Keywords:
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- Accipitridae;
- Aves;
- Evolution;
- Fossil birds;
- Rupelian