Bird Evolution Was Rapid, and Happened Early On, Studies Say

A research project used full genome analysis of 48 bird species to determine a more specific avian tree of life.

How birds evolved is a complex question that has puzzled biologists for decades. A spate of papers in the journal Science provides the clearest picture to date of the avian family tree. By mapping the genomes of 45 bird species for the first time (and using three previously mapped genomes), the researchers were able to more closely trace relationships between species鈥攁nd to confirm that birds underwent an early, rapid, 鈥榖ig bang鈥 that led to the evolution of the more than 10,000 species we have today.

Over 200 scientists from 20 countries joined together to form the Avian Phylogenomics Consortium, the umbrella organization for the research. The project spanned four years, and yielded 28 separate research papers, all published this week.

鈥淗ow do birds relate to each other? This was our fundamental first question,鈥 says , lead author on one of the studies, and head of the section for evolutionary genomics at the Natural History Museum of Denmark, during Science鈥檚 press conference. 

Most modern-day bird species鈥95 percent of them鈥攔eside on a single branch (or 鈥渃lade鈥) of the avian family tree called Neoaves that exists close to the base. The genetic differentiation within this group, however, isn鈥檛 very distinct, so ornithologists have been stumped about exactly how the various lineages within it split off as today鈥檚 species evolved. 

鈥淭here were parts of the tree that were pretty well resolved before this, but when you looked at the base it was very difficult to test relationships,鈥 says , associate professor of biology at the University of Florida. There were so many different theories for how the original splits happened that it was very difficult to rigorously analyze any one idea. Additionally, avian evolution research has previously relied on smaller gene sets, which caused data inconsistencies, further inhibiting any consensus on what the tree looked like.  

For this body of work, the researchers changed the game by using full genome mapping of 48 species, which together encompass all the bird lineages alive today. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 impressive here is the number of different species that they鈥檝e done,鈥 says , an evolutionary geneticist at the University of Sheffield who has worked on bird genome projects in the past, but was not involved in the research. 鈥淭here are almost five-fold as many birds sequenced now.鈥 With this data, the APC were able to reconstruct the avian family tree in unprecedented detail. 鈥淭his is the biggest DNA sequenced tree ever generated. In this case it鈥檚 30 billion base pairs long,鈥 says , an associate professor of avian neurobiology at Duke University School of Medicine.

What Hurt Dinos Helped Birds

In addition to reconstructing a fuller avian tree, the mapping also helped settle a longstanding controversy over when the mass expansion of Neoaves occurred. Past research has suggested this group evolved somewhere between 10 to 80 million years before the mass extinction that killed the dinosaurs. But the genome project allowed the APC to pinpoint the evolutionary development of Neoaves to about 66 million years ago, meaning the origin of all bird species today likely happened right around the time of the mass extinction that wiped out dinosaurs at the end of the Mezozoic Era. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e suggesting [the expansion] occurred right at that time, with only a few lineages surviving the mass extinction, and then giving rise to all these Neoaves groups within the last 66 million years,鈥 Jarvis says. The huge species gap left by the dinosaurs likely created an accommodating environment for the widespread expansion of bird species鈥攐ne that happened very rapidly in evolutionary terms, Jarvis says. 

鈥淎ll modern orders formed from this radiation within a 10 to 15 million year period, around 50 million years ago,鈥 he adds. 

The reworked avian tree also reveals some unexpected relationships between species that were unknown until recently: Flamingoes are related to pigeons, for example, and even though falcons seem similar to eagles, they鈥檙e actually more closely linked to parrots and songbirds. 

The level of detail available in the new avian tree will allow researchers to delve more deeply into avian biology going forward. 鈥淲e can dig into very specific bird traits and look at the genetic basis of them; things like flight, feathers, vision, olfaction, sexual selection,鈥 Gilbert says. 鈥淲e hope we can start addressing even more exciting questions鈥攍ike whether we can infer things about dinosaurs.鈥

The project will be ongoing, Jarvis says, and could ultimately help researchers map other datasets, including insects, mammals, and plants. Researchers say they鈥檙e already seeing noticeable parallels between the avian and mammal genomes.  

鈥淭he findings will certainly help people to decide which questions to ask,鈥 says Slate. 鈥淭his, in a sense, is big toolbox that鈥檚 being described.鈥