The First Occurrence in the Fossil Record of an Aquatic Avian Twig-Nest with Phoenicopteriformes Eggs: Evolutionary Implication


Autoria(s): Grellet-Tinner, Gerald; Murelaga Bereicua, Javier; Larrasoaña, Juan C.; Silveira, Luis F.; Olivares Zabalandicoechea, Maitane; Ortega Cuesta, Luis Ángel; Trimby, Patrick W.; Pascual Cuevas, Ana María
Data(s)

14/02/2014

14/02/2014

17/10/2012

Resumo

14 p.

Background: We describe the first occurrence in the fossil record of an aquatic avian twig-nest with five eggs in situ (Early Miocene Tudela Formation, Ebro Basin, Spain). Extensive outcrops of this formation reveal autochthonous avian osteological and oological fossils that represent a single taxon identified as a basal phoenicopterid. Although the eggshell structure is definitively phoenicopterid, the characteristics of both the nest and the eggs are similar to those of modern grebes. These observations allow us to address the origin of the disparities between the sister taxa Podicipedidae and Phoenicopteridae crown clades, and traces the evolution of the nesting and reproductive environments for phoenicopteriforms.-- Methodology/Principal Findings: Multi-disciplinary analyses performed on fossilized vegetation and eggshells from the eggs in the nest and its embedding sediments indicate that this new phoenicopterid thrived under a semi-arid climate in an oligohaline (seasonally mesohaline) shallow endorheic lacustine environment. High-end microcharacterizations including SEM, TEM, and EBSD techniques were pivotal to identifying these phoenicopterid eggshells. Anatomical comparisons of the fossil bones with those of Phoenicopteriformes and Podicipediformes crown clades and extinct palaelodids confirm that this avian fossil assemblage belongs to a new and basal phoenicopterid. -- Conclusions/Significance: Although the Podicipediformes-Phoenicopteriformes sister group relationship is now well supported, flamingos and grebes exhibit feeding, reproductive, and nesting strategies that diverge significantly. Our multi-disciplinary study is the first to reveal that the phoenicopteriform reproductive behaviour, nesting ecology and nest characteristics derived from grebe-like type strategies to reach the extremely specialized conditions observed in modern flamingo crown groups. Furthermore, our study enables us to map ecological and reproductive characters on the Phoenicopteriformes evolutionary lineage. Our results demonstrate that the nesting paleoenvironments of flamingos were closely linked to the unique ecology of this locality, which is a direct result of special climatic (high evaporitic regime) and geological (fault system) conditions.

Identificador

PLoS ONE 7(10) : (2012) // e46972

1932-6203

http://hdl.handle.net/10810/11493

10.1371/journal.pone.0046972

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Public Library of Science

Relação

http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0046972

Direitos

© Grellet-Tinner et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Ebro basin #Miocene #Spain #Europe #birds #aves #diffraction #phylogeny #evolutionary ecology #fossils #paleoecology #paleozoology #sediment
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article