Abstract

The evolution of birds from dinosaurs is a subject that has received great attention among vertebrate paleontologists. Nevertheless, the early evolution of the paravians, the group that contains birds and their closest non-avian dinosaur relatives, remains very poorly known. Even the most basal members of one paravian lineage, the Dromaeosauridae, already show a body plan that differs substantially from their closest non-paravian relatives. Recently, the dromaeosaurid Halszkaraptor escuilliei was described from the Cretaceous of Mongolia. Halszkaraptor possesses numerous unserrated premaxillary teeth, a platyrostral rostrum with a developed neurovascular system, an elongate neck, bizarrely-proportioned forearms, and a foreword-shifted center of mass, differing markedly from other paravians. A reevaluation of the anatomy, taphonomy, environmental setting, and phylogenetic position of H. escuilliei based on additional comparisons with other maniraptorans suggests that, rather than indicating it was a semiaquatic piscivore, the body plan of this dinosaur bears features widely distributed among maniraptorans and in some cases intermediate between the conditions in dromaeosaurids and related clades. I find no evidence for a semiaquatic lifestyle in Halszkaraptor. A phylogenetic reevaluation of Halszkaraptorinae places it as the sister clade to Unenlagiinae, indicating the bizarre features of unenlagiines previously interpreted as evidence of piscivory may also represent a mosaic of plesiomorphic, derived, and intermediate features. The anatomy of Halszkaraptor reveals that dromaeosaurids still possessed many features found in more basal maniraptoran and coelurosaur clades, including some that may have been tied to herbivory. Rather than being a semiaquatic piscavore, Halszkaraptor was a basal dromaeosaurid showing transitional features.

Highlights

  • The evolution of birds from dinosaurs is a subject that has received great attention among vertebrate paleontologists

  • Halszkaraptor, bizarre among paravians, possesses many features that can be traced back to more basal maniraptorans. It is reinterpreted as a transitional form between non-paravian maniraptorans and more derived dromaeosaurids

  • The anatomy of the premaxillae and dentary of Halszkaraptor might have some implications for the facial integument of dromaeosaurids, no strong conclusion about the nature of such coverings can be drawn currently

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Summary

Introduction

The evolution of birds from dinosaurs is a subject that has received great attention among vertebrate paleontologists. The ancestral maniraptoran body plan seems to have been adapted for omnivory or herbivory, and members of lineages bracketing the paravian stem, including therizinosaurs, oviraptorosaurs, alvarezsaurs, and ornithomimosaurs, shared features like a long neck, an elongate skull with many small teeth or an edentulous jaw with rhamphotheca, a deepened thorax, and a forward-shifted center of mass[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14] Many of these traits seem to be related to the development of an omnivorous or herbivorous diet in these clades[1,2,3,4,5,8,11,12,13,15,16,17,18,19]. Instead of a being a semiaquatic piscivore, Halszkaraptor instead is likely representative of the morphological transition from the ancestral body plan of maniraptorans to the one that characterized dromaeosaurids

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