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Osteodontornis

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Osteodontornis
Temporal range: Miocene (but see text)
20–6 Ma
Artist's impression
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Odontopterygiformes
Family: Pelagornithidae
Genus: Osteodontornis
Howard, 1957
Species:
O. orri
Binomial name
Osteodontornis orri
Howard, 1957

Osteodontornis is an extinct seabird genus. It contains a single named species, Osteodontornis orri (Orr's bony-toothed bird, in literal translation of its scientific name), which was described quite exactly one century after the first species of the Pelagornithidae (Pelagornis miocaenus) was. O. orri was named after Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History paleontologist Phil C. Orr, for his recognition of the importance of the specimen.[1]

The bony-toothed or pseudotooth birds were initially believed to be related to albatrosses in the Procellariiformes, but actually they seem to be rather close relatives of either pelicans and storks, or of waterfowl, and are here placed in the order Odontopterygiformes to account for this uncertainty. Also, their internal taxonomy is not well-resolved. An earlier-described pseudotooth bird, Cyphornis magnus from Vancouver Island (Canada), was believed to be of Eocene age but is nowadays assumed to have lived about twenty million years ago in the Early Miocene, not too long before the Clarendonian (Middle/Late Miocene) O. orri. It may be that Osteodontornis is a junior synonym of Cyphornis.[2]

Description

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With a wingspan of 5.5 to 6 metres (18 to 20 ft) and a height of 1.2 metres (3.9 ft) when on the ground, Osteodontornis orri and similar giant pseudotooth birds[3] were the second-largest flying birds known, surpassed only by the teratorn Argentavis magnificens. The head, from neck to bill-tip, measured about 40 centimetres (1.3 ft), and the eyesockets were about 5.3 centimetres (2.1 in) wide. The humerus, though about as long as a human's, was only about 3.5 centimetres (1.4 in) wide at the shoulder end. The skull's quadrate bone measured almost 30 millimetres (1.2 in) at its widest and was nearly 45 millimetres (1.8 in) high.[4]

Like its relatives, O. orri had a stout but extremely light-boned body, feet that were presumably webbed as in its aquatic relatives, and long and probably very narrow wings resembling those of an albatross. Its beak made up about three-quarters of the head's length and had bony tooth-like serrations that were hollow or maybe filled with cancellous bone. The beak was so heavy the creature probably held it between its shoulders while in flight, just like modern pelicans do. The arrangement of its bony serrations is characteristic for this genus: one small "tooth", flanked by small points or even smaller "teeth", is placed between each pair of large ones. However, the "tooth" pattern of pseudotooth birds changed along the length of the beak, and is not considered a very reliable way to distinguish genera.[5]

In general lifestyle, it was probably most similar to the albatrosses, tropicbirds and frigatebirds of today, with long slender wings adapted for soaring vast distances over the open seas. Due to its size, the bird is presumed to have been an excellently adapted dynamic soarer. It probably built its nest on high plateaus or similar places, where it could easily take flight by simply walking into the wind with wings spread. It was a seabird that apparently lived mainly off squid and other soft-bodied prey; the "teeth" were less saw-like than the horny serrations on the beak of the fish-eating saw-billed ducks (Merginae), pointing straight downwards instead and in the fossils often very abraded or broken. The downward-pointing "teeth" were ideal for digging into and holding slippery, soft-skinned pelagic animals such as cephalopods that were probably snatched out of the water in flight or while swimming. Lightly built as it was, O. orri was probably not a good diver and may have found it impossible to dive at all.[6]

Osteodontornis is one of the pseudotooth birds of which rather comprehensive remains are known, but the lack of good fossils of most other Odontopterygiformes allows for few direct comparisons between genera. Still, the distal humerus of the present genus (e.g. the Barstovian specimen LACM 50660 from Kern County, California) can be compared to that of a smaller and older fossil[7] tentatively assigned to Odontopteryx. Osteodontornis has a wider and deeper notch between the external condyle and the ectepicondylar prominence, with the pit between these farther from the bone's end, than did the smallish Paleogene species. Its quadrate bone differed from that of Odontopteryx toliapica in a more narrowly grooved dorsal head, and a larger and less forward-pointing orbital process. The forward center of the ventral articulation ridge extends upwards and forward, and the pterygoid process is conspicuously expanded to the upper center in Osteodontornis. The socket for the quadratojugal has an intermediate position and the lateral ridge of the slender main shaft is straight and fairly thin. The quadrate of the mysterious Pseudodontornis longirostris skull (which some consider to belong in Pelagornis) is not very well preserved; it agees with Odontopteryx in a broad main shaft and with Osteodontornis in the straight main shaft ridge and its upward-directed ventral articulation ridge's forward center. Otherwise, it differs from both.[8]

Distribution

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This species is well documented from various locations of generally Miocene age, although usually by much fragmented remains due to the thin and tender bones it had. Most importantly, it was found on both sides of the North Pacific. It is not certain whether all Osteodontornis remains belong to a single species; size differences suggest that some evolution took place during the timespan in which the genus existed. Thus, some fossils are referred to Osteodontornis only, without further assigning them to this species.[9]

The type specimen of O. orri, SBMNH 309, is a rather comprehensive fossil preserved mostly as imprint, with some bone pieces and even feather impressions in addition; it was found in Clarendonian (Late Miocene) shale of California (USA). Subsequently, for example in the Barstovian (Middle Miocene) Round Mountain Silt[10] or in Late Miocene deposits of the Monterey Formation,[11] quite a few additional specimens[12] dating from about the same time were found in California. Roughly contemporary specimens were described from the Haranoyan-Tozawan boundary in Japan – a complete right quadrate bone (NSM PV-18696) from the Middle Miocene Nagura Formation at Chichibu, Saitama, an Early Miocene right mandible piece (Mizunami Fossil Museum (MFM) 28351) found in the Oi Formation at Misato, Mie, and some additional material of about the same age from the Mizunami Group at Mizunami, Gifu. From the Early Miocene Nye Formation and the Middle Miocene Astoria Formations of Oregon a handful of specimens[13] that appear to be Osteodontornis[14] are known. Similar fossils have been found in the Middle Miocene Capadare Formation of Venezuela and from the Late Miocene of the Pisco Formation[15] of Peru; they might rather be of a distinct but closely related genus, and it must be remembered that at that their time the Isthmus of Panama had not been formed yet so that an affiliation with the Atlantic Pelagornis cannot be discounted. The former, specimen MBLUZ-P-5093 from Cueva del Zumbador in Falcón State, is a premaxilla tip of immense dimensions; its bearer might have exceeded a wingspan of 7 metres (23 ft) in life. Though some of the Miocene North American material was initially (and sometimes is still) assigned to Pelagornis, recent authors generally place them in the present genus. [16]

Some wing bone fossils[17] from the Eo-Oligocene boundary of Oregon (United States), though assigned to Argillornis (= Dasornis), do not differ much from those of Osteodontornis (as far as can be told in their fragmented state), and may be from an older relative. They are the oldest known remains of large North Pacific pseudotooth birds, but if the enigmatic Cyphornis magnus from the same region dates back to the Paleogene they may well be assignable to that taxon, whatever their systematic affiliations might be beyond that. As few directly comparable bones of sufficient quality exist, the relationship of Osteodontornis to other pseudotooth birds is not completely resolved. As noted above, the entire genus (regardless of how many species can be recognized) may be a junior synonym of Cyphornis. Generally, recent authors have tended to place large Neogene pseudotooth bird fossils from the Atlantic in Pelagornis, and those from the North Pacific in Osteodontornis. It remains to be seen if this east–west division can be upheld, but biogeographically it seems quite sensible at least as a working hypothesis until sufficient well-preserved material has been found to make an in-depth study. It is less clear what to make of the Southern Hemisphere pseudotooth birds fossils, none of which are complete enough for more than the most tentative identification. Many seabirds of our time, such as albatrosses and other Procellariiformes, show a phylogenetic division between Northern and Southern Hemisphere lineages, separated by the Equatorial currents. Whether this also held true in the warmer climate of the Miocene is not known, but the general phylogenetic patterns found in Procellariiformes suggests that the north–south division is rather ancient and evolved even before the Miocene.[18]

From the Neogene of New Zealand "Pseudodontornis" stirtoni has been described, which unlike the rest of its (doubtfully valid) genus is not from the Paleogene Atlantic region. It has been proposed as a monotypic genus Neodontornis, but this has not been widely accepted. It may be valid still, as the bones are of a rather small pseudotooth bird; though apparently too small for Osteodontornis detailed comparisons could be insightful. Its jugal arch is indeed short and very stout behind the orbital process of the prefrontal bone, like in Osteodontornis but apparently unlike in the type species of its supposed genus, P. longirostris. A larger proximal (initially misidentified as distal) humerus piece (CMNZ AV 24,960), probably from the Waiauan (Middle/Late Miocene) and found near the Waipara River mouth, is little if any distinct from O. orri in shape and size; it has a flange at the side and is less straight, but whether these features are natural or due to the damaged state of the specimens is unclear. It also agrees more with Pelagornis than with Paleogene remains from Oregon mentioned above. A distal left humerus end and some wing bone fragments from the Late Oligocene Yamaga Formation of Kitakyūshū (Japan) might be the oldest remains of an Osteodontornis, but their assignment to the present genus is just as uncertain as in the case of the New Zealand fossil. Also from Japan are one or two of the youngest pseudodontorn fossils – a fragmentary right humerus from the Early Pliocene Yushima Formation at Maesawa, and probably also a distal right femur (MFM 1801) from the Early Pleistocene[19] Dainichi Formation at Kakegawa that was initially believed to be from an albatross. These might represent the last survivors of Osteodontornis – the Kakegawa fossil at least is a good match in size –, but require more study before they can be assigned there.[20]

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Howard (1957)
  2. ^ Bourdon (2005), Olson (1985: pp.198–199), Mayr (2009: p.59)
  3. ^ E.g. the Paleogene Dasornis emuinus and Gigantornis eaglesomei, or the Atlantic contemporary of Osteodontornis, Pelagornis miocaenus
  4. ^ Howard (1957), Olson (1985: pp.199–200), Ono (1989), Mayr (2008), Mayr et al. (2008)
  5. ^ Hopson (1964), Olson (1985: pp.199–200), Matsuoka et al. (1998), Palmer (1999: p.180), Rincón R. & Stucchi (2003)
  6. ^ Olson (1985: pp.199–200), Palmer (1999: p.180)
  7. ^ Specimen MHN-UABCS Te5/6–517, from Middle Eocene strata of the Tepetate Formation near El Cien (Baja California Sur, Mexico): González-Barba et al. (2002)
  8. ^ Olson (1985: pp.195,198), Ono (1989), González-Barba et al. (2002)
  9. ^ Olson (1985: pp.195,198–199), Matsuoka et al. (1998), Stidham (2004)
  10. ^ The distal humerus end LACM 50660, the proximal ulna end LACM 104057, a large beak piece (NMNH PAL 425116) and some other remains: Olson (1985: pp.195,198), Goedert (1989), González-Barba et al. (2002)
  11. ^ Olson (1985: p.198)
  12. ^ Including upper and lower beak fragments and an atlas vertebra: Hopson (1964)
  13. ^ From the Astoria Formation, a proximal ulna end (LACM 128423), a cranium (NMNH PAL 335463), right ulna and humerus which lack the elbow ends (NMNH PAL 335794), and a very worn sternum (NMNH PAL 335293). From the Nye Formation a humerus piece and proximal right coracoid (NMNH PAL 314330), and some cervical vertebrae (NMNH PAL 335621): Ray (1976), Goedert (1989), Olson (1985: pp.196,198,200), Mayr et al. (2008), NMNH-DP [2009]
  14. ^ "Pseudodontornis" in Becker (1987) is a lapsus, should be "pseudodontornids": Goedert (1989)
  15. ^ MUSM 210 (beak fragments and an atlas vertebra), MUSM 666 (proximal right humerus head), MUSM 667 (proximal ulna). A well-preserved skull unveiled in 2009 also shows Osteodontornis-like "teeth", but was apparently of a larger bird: Palmer (1999: p.180)[verification needed], Chávez et al. (2007), GG [2009]
  16. ^ Hopson (1964), Olson (1985: pp.195–196,198–200), Goedert (1989), Ono (1989), Ono & Sakamoto (1991), Matsuoka et al. (1998), González-Barba et al. (2002), Rincón R. & Stucchi (2003), Stidham (2004), Chávez et al. (2007), NEO (2008), GG [2009]
  17. ^ Specimen LACM 128462, a mostly complete proximal end of a left ulna from the Keasey Formation of Washington County, Oregon; presumably also LACM 127875, fragments of the proximal humerus ends, the proximal right ulna and radius of a single individual from the Pittsburg Bluff Formation near Mist: Goedert (1989)
  18. ^ Olson (1985: pp.197–199), Goedert (1989), Nunn & Stanley (1998), González-Barba et al. (2002), Mayr (2009: p.57)
  19. ^ Gelasian, formerly Late Pliocene: Walker & Geissman (2009)
  20. ^ Scarlett (1972), Olson (1985: pp.198–199), Goedert (1989), Ono (1980, 1989), Matsuoka et al. (1998), González-Barba et al. (2002), Mlíkovský (2002: p.84), Mayr (2008, 2009: p.58)

References

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  • Becker, J.J. (1987): Neogene avian localities of North America. Smithsonian Research Monographs 1. Prentice Hall & IBD. ISBN 0-87474-225-0
  • Chávez, Martín; Stucchi, Marcelo & Urbina, Mario (2007): El registro de Pelagornithidae (Aves: Pelecaniformes) y la Avifauna Neógena del Pacífico Sudeste [The record of Pelagornithidae (Aves: Pelecaniformes) and the Neogene avifauna of the southeast Pacific]. Bulletin de l’Institut Français d’Études Andines 36(2): 175–197 [Spanish with French and English abstracts]. PDF fulltext
  • Goedert, James L. (1989): Giant Late Eocene Marine Birds (Pelecaniformes: Pelagornithidae) from Northwestern Oregon. J. Paleontol. 63(6): 939–944. Abstract and first page text
  • González-Barba, Gerardo; Schwennicke, Tobias; Goedert, James L. & Barnes, Lawrence G. (2002): Earliest Pacific Basin record of the Pelagornithidae (Aves, Pelecaniformes). J. Vertebr. Paleontol. 22(2): 722–725. DOI:10.1671/0272-4634(2002)022[0722:EPBROT]2.0.CO;2 HTML abstract
  • Hopson, James A. (1964): Pseudodontornis and other large marine birds from the Miocene of South Carolina. Postilla 83: 1–19. Fulltext at the Internet Archive
  • Howard, Hildegarde (1957): A gigantic "toothed" marine bird from the Miocene of California. Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History Bulletin (Geology Department) 1: 1–23. Fulltext at HathiTrust
  • Matsuoka, Hirosige; Sakakura, Fujio & Ohe, Fumio (1998): A Miocene pseudodontorn (Pelecaniformes: Pelagornithidae) from the Ichishi Group of Misato, Mie Prefecture, Central Japan. Paleontological Research 2(4): 246–252. PDF fulltext
  • Mayr, Gerald (2008): A skull of the giant bony-toothed bird Dasornis (Aves: Pelagornithidae) from the Lower Eocene of the Isle of Sheppey. Palaeontology 51(5): 1107–1116. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2008.00798.x (HTML abstract)
  • Mayr, Gerald (2009): Paleogene Fossil Birds. Springer-Verlag, Heidelberg & New York. ISBN 3-540-89627-9
  • Mayr, Gerald; Hazevoet, Cornelis J.; Dantas, Pedro; & Cachāo, Mário (2008): A sternum of a very large bony-toothed bird (Pelagornithidae) from the Miocene of Portugal. J. Vertebr. Paleontol. 28(3): 762–769. DOI:10.1671/0272-4634(2008)28[762:ASOAVL]2.0.CO;2 HTML abstract
  • Mlíkovský, Jirí (2002): Cenozoic Birds of the World, Part 1: Europe. Ninox Press, Prague. ISBN 80-901105-3-8 PDF fulltext
  • NASA Earth Observatory (NEO) (2008): Panama: Isthmus that Changed the World. Version of 2008-SEP-22. Retrieved 2009-SEP-24.
  • National Museum of Natural History Department of Paleobiology (NMNH-DP) [2009]: Paleobiology Collections Search. Version of 2009-AUG-07. Retrieved 2009-AUG-22.
  • Nunn, G. & Stanley, S. (1998): Body Size Effects and Rates of Cytochrome b Evolution in Tube-Nosed Seabirds. Molecular Biology and Evolution 15(10): 1360–1371 PDF fulltext Corrigendum
  • Olson, Storrs L. (1985): The Fossil Record of Birds. In: Farner, D.S.; King, J.R. & Parkes, Kenneth C. (eds.): Avian Biology 8: 79–252. PDF fulltext
  • Ono, Keiichi (1980): Pliocene Tubinare Bird from Kakegawa, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. Memoirs of the National Science Museum 13(1): 29–34, plate 2 [Japanese with English abstract]. PDF fulltext
  • Ono, Keiichi (1989): A Bony-Toothed Bird from the Middle Miocene, Chichibu Basin, Japan. Bulletin of the National Science Museum Series C: Geology & Paleontology 15(1): 33–38. PDF fulltext
  • Ono, Keiichi & Sakamoto, Osamu (1991): Discovery of five Miocene birds from Chichibu Basin, central Japan. Bulletin of the Saitama Museum of Natural History 9: 41–49 [Japanese with English abstract]. HTML abstract
  • Palmer, D. (1999): The Marshall Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals. Marshall Editions, London. ISBN 1-84028-152-9
  • Ray, Clayton E. (1976): Fossil Marine Mammals of Oregon. Systematic Zoology 25(4): 420–436. doi:10.2307/2412515 Abstract and first page image
  • Rincón R., Ascanio D. & Stucchi, Marcelo (2003): Primer registro de la familia Pelagornithidae (Aves: Pelecaniformes) para Venezuela [First record of Pelagornithidae family from Venezuela]. Boletín de la Sociedad Venezolana de Espeleología 37: 27–30 [Spanish with English abstract]. PDF fulltext
  • Scarlett, R.J. (1972): Bone of a presumed odontopterygian bird from the Miocene of New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics 15(2): 269–274. Fulltext at Google Books
  • Stidham, Thomas A. (2004): New skull material of Osteodontornis orri (Aves: Pelagornithidae) from the Miocene of California. PaleoBios (Berkeley) 24(1): 7–12 HTML abstract
  • Walker, J.D. & Geissman, J.W. (2009): 2009 GSA Geologic Time Scale . GSA Today 19(4): 60–61. doi:10.1130/1052-5173-19.4-5.60 PDF fulltext
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  • University of Kyoto: Photo of specimen MFM 28351. Retrieved 2009-AUG-20.
  • Flickr: Photo of Round Mountain Silt jaw specimens at Buena Vista Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 2009-AUG-21.
  • Flickr: Photo of Astoria Formation arm specimen NMNH PAL 335794 and Nye Formation vertebrae specimen NMNH PAL 335621 at National Museum of Natural History (mislabeled as Pelagornis). Retrieved 2009-AUG-21.
  • Flickr: Photo of holotype specimen (SBMNH 309) slab (with bone fragments) at Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 2009-AUG-21.
  • Flickr: Photo of SBMNH 309 counterslab (with bone impressions) at Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 2009-AUG-21.
  • Flickr: Another photo of SBMNH 309 counterslab at Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 2009-AUG-21.
  • California Mediterranean Research Learning Center: Photo of a jaw specimen embedded in matrix. Retrieved 2009-AUG-21.