Untangling the tree or unravelling the consensus? Recent developments in
the quest to resolve the broad-scale relationships within Dinosauria
Open access paper:
https://doi.org/10.1080/14772019.2024.2345333
Abstract
The phylogenetic relationships of the major lineages within Dinosauria
have come under intense scrutiny in recent years. In 2017, a radical new hypothesis of early dinosaur evolution, the ‘Ornithoscelida hypothesis’, was proposed, prompting a flurry of work in this area. However, instead
of untangling the phylogenetic tree of dinosaurs as hoped, this further research unravelled the scientific consensus on dinosaur origins and
their early relationships. Multiple hypotheses have now been proposed, including several that position the ‘traditionally’ non-dinosaurian silesaurids within Dinosauria. There is no sign of an emerging
consensus, with all possible combinations of the three major dinosaur
clades (Ornithischia, Theropoda and Sauropodomorpha) having been
recovered by recent phylogenetic analyses. The existence of several
‘wildcard taxa’ and clades with uncertain affinities around the base of Dinosauria complicates efforts to differentiate these hypotheses. Recent studies have suggested that the data sets used to investigate the
phylogenetic relationships of Dinosauria might be fatally flawed. The construction of new data sets with a stronger focus on the logical
underpinning of characters, in addition to the inclusion of newly
described or redescribed taxa, will likely hold the key to resolving
this debate.
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