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Strisores
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Strisores
Temporal range:
Early Eocene - Holocene, 51–0 Ma[1] Possibly an earlier origin based on molecular clock[2]
Common nighthawk, Chordeiles minor
(Caprimulgidae)
Male rufous hummingbird,
Selasphorus rufus (Trochilidae)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Clade: Neoaves
Clade: Strisores
Cabanis, 1847
Orders

Strisores (/strˈsrz/ stry-SOH-reez[3]), sometimes called nightbirds, is a clade of birds that includes the living families and orders Caprimulgidae (nightjars, nighthawks and allies), Nyctibiidae (potoos), Steatornithidae (oilbirds), Podargidae (frogmouths), Apodiformes (swifts and hummingbirds), as well as the Aegotheliformes (owlet-nightjars) whose distinctness was only recently realized. The Apodiformes (which include the "Trochiliformes" of the Sibley-Ahlquist taxonomy) and the Aegotheliformes form the Daedalornithes.[4]

Description

[edit]

The material evidence for this group is very equivocal; the most ancient Strisores are quite nondescript tree-dwellers but already tend towards peculiarly apomorphic feet, and no Cretaceous fossils are known. Torpor and other metabolic peculiarities are frequently found in this group, perhaps more often than in any other bird lineage. The synapomorphies that define this clade are the ossa maxillaria separated by a large cleft, a mandible with short pars symphysialis, and rami mandibulae slender in their distal half.[citation needed]

Taxonomic history

[edit]

The taxonomy of this group of birds has a long and complicated history. Jean Cabanis originally coined the name Strisores in 1847 as an order encompassing a much broader group of birds subdivided into two 'tribes': the Macrochires (hummingbirds, swifts, and nightjars, including oilbirds and potoos, but notably excluding frogmouths) and the Amphibolae (hoatzin, mousebirds, and turacos).[5] Hermann Burmeister later excluded the taxa in Cabanis' Amphibolae from Strisores, but added kingfishers and motmots.[6] Subsequent authors used either definition according to their own judgement, with Baird following Cabanis',[7] and Cooper following Burmeister's usage.[8] In 1867, Thomas Henry Huxley proposed the name Cypselomorphae for hummingbirds, swifts, and nightjars (including owlet-nightjars and potoos), however, he considered frogmouths and oilbirds unrelated due to aspects of their skull morphology.[9] In the 1880s Anton Reichenow continued to use Strisores in a similar sense as Huxley's Cypselomorphae (this time also excluding the owlet-nightjars),[10] but by the late 19th Century, Strisores had fallen into disuse,[11] and this remained the case through the 20th Century.[12][13][14][15]

By the early 21st century, analyses of anatomical morphology and molecular phylogenomics demonstrated that the order Caprimulgiformes as had been used for much of the 20th century (oilbirds, potoos, nightjars, frogmouths, and owlet-nightjars) is actually paraphyletic respective to Apodiformes (hummingbirds, swifts, and treeswifts), with apodiform birds nesting deeply within caprimulgiformes and a sister taxon to the owlet-nightjars.[16][17] The discovery has led to a challenge of reconciling a Linnean hierarchy with phylogenetic relationships while still maintaining nomenclatural stability, resulting in a complicated situation where some researchers currently use the resurrected name Strisores in a new sense,[17][18] others expand the order Caprimulgiformes to include the 'traditional' apodiform families,[19] whereas others[20] use the superordinal name Caprimulgimorphae Cracraft, 2013,[21] raising the 'traditional' caprimulgiform families to the rank of order.

Proposed phylogenetic definitions of Strisores and Caprimulgimorphae treat Strisores as the crown group and Caprimulgimorphae as the total group.[22] This allows both names to be valid, with similar but not identical meanings.

Evolution

[edit]
Fossil of Hassiavis laticauda, a probable daedalornithean,[22] from the Messel fossil site

Strisores has a well-represented fossil record, with fossils of most major strisorean lineages known from the Paleogene.[22] Chen et al. (2019)[23] included 14 fossil lineages in their analysis. Nonetheless, it supports the emerging consensus phylogeny well. The genus Paraprefica, probably from the Early Eocene (though this is somewhat uncertain), seems to be a basal form that at times has been allied with the oilbird and the potoos, but cannot be assigned to either with certainty. In the consensus scenario, it would represent a record of the initial divergence of the three lineages.

This agrees with fossils suggesting that the basal divergence of the owlet-nightjar and apodiform branch also occurred during that time. In addition, Eocypselus, a Late Paleocene or Early Eocene genus of North America, cannot be assigned to any one strisore lineage with certainty but appears to be some ancestral form.[1] Over some 20 million years, throughout the Eocene, the present-day diversity (as well as some entirely extinct lineages) slowly unfolds. By mid-Oligocene, some 30 million years ago, the crown lineages are present and adapting to their present-day ecological niches.

These Paleogene birds strongly suggest that the two main extant lineages of strisores separated about 60–55 mya (Selandian-Thanetian), and that some time around the Lutetian-Bartonian boundary, some 40 mya, the common ancestors of Nyctibiidae, Caprimulgidae and eared nightjars diverged from those of oilbird and frogmouths.

The relationships of the Early Eocene Parvicuculus and Procuculus from the southern North Sea basin are unresolved, but they bear some similarities to strisores.

By the distribution of fossils, the Paleogene radiation seems to have originated in Asia, which at that time became a highly fragmented landscape as the Himalayas lifted up and the Turgai Strait started to disappear.

Several fossil taxa are tentatively placed here as basal or incertae sedis

Systematics

[edit]

Strisores contains the extant orders Aegotheliformes, Apodiformes (with families Apodidae, Hemiprocnidae, and Trochilidae), Caprimulgiformes, Nyctibiiformes, Podargiformes, Steatornithiformes. Apodidae and Hemiprocnidae are grouped together as Apodi, Apodi and Trochilidae are grouped together as Apodiformes, and Apodiformes and Aegotheliformes are grouped together as Daedalornithes.

The classification of the various birds that make up the order has long been controversial and difficult, particularly in the case of the nightjars and the paraphyly of the traditional Caprimulgiformes in relation to "Apodiformes", traditionally considered a separate order.

The IUCN adopts the following classification of Order Caprimulgiformes,[24] which follows recent phylogenetic studies:

The IUCN definition renders the order Caprimulgiformes identical to the clade Strisores. Authorities that favor the use of Strisores for this group (e.g., Yuri et al. 2013[25] and Chen et al. 2019[23]) adopt a sensu stricto definition of the order, limiting to the family Caprimulgidae. They also elevate many (or even all) of the families traditionally placed in Caprimulgiformes to ordinal rank.[25] This requires recognizing at least three additional orders: Nyctibiiformes, Steatornithiformes, and Podargiformes. Owlet-nightjars can be placed in their own order (Aegotheliformes)[25] or viewed as a family within Apodiformes.[26]

Traditionally, Caprimulgiformes were regarded, on morphological grounds, as being midway between the owls (Strigiformes) and the swifts. Like the owls, they are nocturnal hunters with a highly developed sense of sight, and like the swifts they are excellent flyers with small, weak legs. At one time or another, they have been allied with owls, swifts, kingfishers, hoopoes, mousebirds, hornbills, rollers, bee-eaters, woodpeckers, trogons and hummingbirds. A close relationship to owls can be rejected since there is strong molecular evidence[27][28] that owls are members of a clade, called Telluraves, that excludes Caprimulgiformes.

Based on analysis of DNA sequence data – notably β-fibrinogen intron 7 – Fain and Houde considered the families of the Caprimulgiformes to be members of the proposed clade Metaves, which also includes the hoatzin, tropicbirds, sandgrouse, pigeons, kagu, sunbittern, mesites, flamingos, grebes and swifts and hummingbirds. Metaves was also found by the expanded study of Ericson et al. (2006), but support for the clade was extremely weak.

While only the latter study recovered monophyly of the Cypselomorphae (see below) within Metaves, the former was based on only a single locus and could not resolve their relationships according to standard criteria of statistical confidence. No morphological synapomorphies have been found that uniquely unite Metaves (or Caprimulgiformes for that matter), but numerous unlinked nuclear genes independently support their monophyly either in majority or whole. Ericson et al. (2006) concluded that if valid, the "Metaves" must originate quite some time before the Paleogene, and they reconciled this with the fossil record.

While the relationships of cypselomorphs are a subject of ongoing debate, the phylogeny of the individual lineages is better resolved. Much of the remaining uncertainty regards minor details.

Initial mtDNA cytochrome b sequence analysis agreed with earlier morphological and DNA-DNA hybridization studies insofar as that the oilbird and the frogmouths seemed rather distinct. The other lineages appeared to form a clade, but this is now known to have been caused by methodological limitations.

The Aegothelidae (owlet-nightjars) with about a dozen living species in one genus are apparently closer to the Apodiformes; these and the Caprimulgiformes are closely related, being grouped together as Cypselomorphae. The oilbird and the frogmouths seem quite distinct among the remaining Caprimulgiformes, but their exact placement cannot be resolved based on osteological data alone.

Even the study of Ericson et al. could not properly resolve the oilbird's and frogmouths' relationships beyond the fact that they are quite certainly well distinct. It robustly supported, however, the idea that the owlet-nightjars should be considered closer to Caprimulgiformes, unlike the methodologically weaker studies of Mariaux & Braun (1996) and Fain and Houde (2004).

Alternatively, Mayr's phylogenetic taxon Cypselomorphae might be placed at order rank and substitute the two present orders Caprimulgiformes and Apodiformes. Such a group would be fairly uninformative as regards its evolutionary history, as it has to include some very plesiomorphic and some extremely derived lineages (such as hummingbirds) to achieve monophyly. Reddy et al. (2017)[29] included hummingbirds and swifts in Caprimulgiformes, preserving the monophyly of the order.

The following cladogram follows the results of Mayr's (2002) phylogenetic study, which used a parsimony analysis of 25 morphological characters:

Subsequent molecular work has converged on two alternative topologies (topologies 1 and 2 below) that differ in the placement of the root.[30] Although Braun et al. (2019)[30] suggested that topology 1 was favored in large-scale analyses of non-coding data were analyzed and that topology 2 was favored in large-scale analyses of coding data (e.g., Prum et al. (2015)[31]) subsequent analyses of datasets with many non-coding loci[23][32] have also recovered topology 2. Thus, topology 2 should be viewed as the best-corroborated hypothesis at this time.

Topology 1: phylogeny according to Reddy et al. (2017),[29] which analyzed 54 nuclear loci (mostly introns):

Topology 2: phylogeny according to Prum et al. (2015)[31] (259 "anchored hybrid enrichment" loci, which are mostly coding exons), Chen et al. (2019)[23] (combined analysis of 2289 ultra-conserved elements [UCEs] and 117 morphological characters and including fossil taxa), and White and Braun (2019)[32] (based on analyses of multiple UCE datasets, ranging in size from 2289 to 4243 loci):

Cladogram based on Prum et al.,[18] with phylogenetic definitions following Chen et al.:[22]

Strisores
Caprimulgiformes

Caprimulgidae (Nightjars)

sensu stricto
Vanescaves
Steatornithiformes

Steatornithidae (oilbird)

Nyctibiiformes

Nyctibiidae (potoos)

Podargiformes

Podargidae (frogmouths)

Daedalornithes
Aegotheliformes

Aegothelidae (owlet-nightjars)

Apodiformes

Hemiprocnidae (treeswifts)

Apodidae (swifts)

Trochilidae (hummingbirds)

Cladogram based on Reddy, S. et al. (2017):[19]

Caprimulgiformes

Caprimulgidae (Nightjars)

Podargidae (frogmouths)

Daedalornithes

Aegothelidae (owlet-nightjars)

Hemiprocnidae (treeswifts)

Apodidae (swifts)

Trochilidae (hummingbirds)

sensu lato

Chen et al. (2019)[23] proposed the name Vanescaves for the clade comprising all Caprimulgiformes (=Strisores) except Caprimulgidae. White and Braun (2019)[32] acknowledged that some uncertainty remains; specifically, monophyly of the clade comprising Steatornithidae and Nyctibiidae was limited and that three different resolutions of Steatornithidae, Nyctibiidae, and the clade comprising Podargidae and Daedalornithes remain plausible. However, they viewed topology 2 as the best-supported hypothesis.[citation needed]

Presently, the taxonomy favored by the IOC splits oilbirds, potoos, nightjars, and frogmouths into their own orders, along with the order Apodiformes as previously defined.[33]

The cladogram below is based on the molecular phylogenetic study by Josefin Stiller and collaborators published in 2024.[34] The relationships are identical to those obtained by Richard Prum and collaborators using different data in 2015.[18] The orders shown are those recognised by the International Ornithologists' Union (IOC).[35]

Strisores

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Strisores is a of neoavian birds encompassing approximately 600 extant across eight families and six orders, including the predominantly nocturnal or crepuscular lineages of nightjars and allies (Caprimulgidae), potoos (Nyctibiidae), oilbirds (Steatornithidae), frogmouths (Podargidae), and owlet-nightjars (Aegothelidae), alongside the diurnal aerial insectivores swifts (Apodidae and Hemiprocnidae) and hummingbirds (Trochilidae). This diverse group, whose name derives from the Latin for "screech-owl," is characterized by adaptations for aerial foraging, such as specialized wing structures and short, wide beaks, though it exhibits high levels of morphological homoplasy due to convergent evolution across its ecological niches. Within the Neoaves, Strisores represents one of the earliest diverging major clades, with a crown-group origin in the Paleocene and a rich fossil record from the Paleogene epoch that includes early representatives like Eocypselus (an ancient swift-like bird) and Eurotrochilus (a stem hummingbird). The 's internal phylogeny has been refined through total-evidence analyses combining molecular, morphological, and fossil data, revealing nightjars (Caprimulgidae) as sister to the rest of Strisores, with a clade of oilbirds (Steatornithidae) and potoos (Nyctibiidae) sister to another clade comprising frogmouths (Podargidae) and Daedalornithes (owlet-nightjars, swifts, and hummingbirds). Ecologically, Strisores spans a spectrum from crepuscular insectivores that roost camouflaged on the ground or trees to hovering nectar-feeders and cave-dwelling frugivores, highlighting the evolutionary lability of cranial development and flight behaviors within the group.

Description and Characteristics

Morphology

Strisores exhibit a suite of shared morphological features that distinguish them as a monophyletic clade within Neoaves, particularly in their craniofacial and postcranial skeletons adapted to aerial and nocturnal lifestyles. A key synapomorphy is the separation of the ossa maxillaria by a large cleft, which accommodates expansive nasal openings that extend nearly to the bill tip. The skull is generally specialized with large orbits supporting enlarged eyes for low-light vision, and a weak, short bill that is broad at the base—features evident across nightjars, potoos, and swifts, though modified in hummingbirds for nectarivory. Additionally, the mandible features a short pars symphysialis and pointed anterior symphysis, contributing to the lightweight, fragile cranial structure typical of the group. The shows reduction in the number of presacral vertebrae to 18 or fewer in most taxa (though oilbirds retain 19), with numbering typically 11–14, which supports a compact neck suited for rapid head movements during flight or . Craniofacial development in Strisores is characterized by progressive broadening of the and braincase from an early ontogenetic stage, an autapomorphy that links skull diversity to ecological niches such as aerial insectivory and nocturnal ; for instance, nightjars and potoos retain broad, flat with short , while hummingbirds evolve elongated, narrow bills through accelerated postnatal growth. Wing morphology in Strisores is highly specialized for sustained aerial activity, with synapomorphies including a deep, long, rectangular transverse sulcus on the and an unhooked acrocoracoid process on the , enabling efficient mechanics. Representative adaptations include elongated primaries in swifts and hummingbirds for high-speed flight and hovering, contrasting with the broad, rounded wings of nightjars that promote silent, pursuit of prey. Feet are generally weak and reduced, with the tendons of the flexor digitorum longus and flexor hallucis longus enclosed in bony canals along the , aiding brief perching or clinging to vertical surfaces rather than walking; while most taxa have reduced feet, frogmouths exhibit relatively stronger tarsi and toes adapted for grasping larger prey; in swifts, the toes exhibit pamprodactyly for versatile gripping during aerial roosting. Plumage in Strisores varies but often includes cryptic patterns for concealment, particularly in nocturnal lineages like nightjars and potoos, where mottled grays and browns provide against bark or ground substrates. Rictal bristles around the bill, a synapomorphy present in most taxa, likely aid in sensory detection of during flight. These features collectively underscore the clade's to aerial and crepuscular ecologies, with morphological convergence in flight-related traits across diverse habitats.

Physiology and Behavior

Strisores display remarkable metabolic adaptations tailored to their energetic demands and lifestyles. Hummingbirds, as high-energy aerial specialists, maintain elevated metabolic rates during activity to fuel sustained hovering and rapid wingbeats, but they enter nightly, reducing their metabolic rate by 60–95% and body temperature to near ambient levels for . In contrast, nocturnal members like nightjars exhibit basal metabolic rates approximately 30–50% lower than allometric predictions for birds of comparable mass, supporting prolonged inactivity and perching with minimal energy expenditure; this low rate is consistent across Caprimulgiformes, including related potoos, which rely on similar efficiencies during extended motionless vigils. These metabolic peculiarities underscore the clade's versatility, from hyperactive diurnal foraging to energy-thrifty nocturnality. Sensory systems in Strisores are specialized for dim-light operations, enhancing survival in crepuscular or environments. Nightjars feature large eyes with a reflective layer and oil droplets in photoreceptors, boosting sensitivity to low levels and enabling detection of flying during twilight hunts. Oilbirds, navigating pitch-black roosts, produce echolocation via rapid click bursts from syringeal muscle contractions, with signals adjusted to ambient —stronger in darkness for better obstacle avoidance, though mismatched to their optimal hearing range. A 2024 study on evolution highlights clade-wide simplicity in vocal for basic calls in swifts and nightjars, but hummingbirds have independently evolved enlarged lateral labia, intrinsic muscles, and a shortened trachea, enabling complex vocal learning, song sharing, and high-frequency trills absent in non-learning Strisores relatives. These adaptations, including morphologically supported large eyes for , facilitate precise sensory integration during and . Behavioral traits in Strisores emphasize aerial prowess and temporal niche partitioning, with many species showing crepuscular or nocturnal activity to exploit abundance while minimizing diurnal threats. Aerial dominates, as seen in swifts' prolonged, acrobatic flights to scoop mid-air and hummingbirds' hovering nectar dips, while nightjars perform erratic, moth-like chases at using wide gapes. Nesting strategies prioritize concealment and minimal construction; swifts, for instance, lay eggs on bare substrates in tree holes, burrows, cliffs, or building crevices, relying on the site's depth for protection rather than elaborate nests. These patterns reflect the clade's unified aerial theme, balancing high-risk flight with energy-saving repose.

Taxonomic History

Early Classifications

The clade Strisores was first named as a suborder by German ornithologist Jean Cabanis in 1847, within the larger group Insessores, based on shared morphological features of the bill and tongue that suggested a natural affinity among certain aerial and nocturnal birds. Cabanis initially included families such as the nightjars (Caprimulgidae), swifts (Cypselidae), and hummingbirds (Trochilidae), emphasizing their slender, tubular bills adapted for nectarivory or insectivory in flight. This grouping reflected early 19th-century efforts to organize birds by functional anatomy rather than superficial appearance, though it was not universally adopted at the time. Throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries, classifications of these birds evolved, with nightjars and related nocturnal forms often consolidated under the order Caprimulgiformes, separate from the diurnal swifts and hummingbirds (). American ornithologist Wetmore played a key role in standardizing this arrangement during the to , defining Caprimulgiformes as an order encompassing nightjars, potoos (Nyctibiidae), the (Steatornithidae), frogmouths (Podargidae), and owlet-nightjars (Aegothelidae), based on detailed studies of skeletal structure, plumage, and foot morphology that highlighted their crepuscular and nocturnal adaptations. Wetmore's influential checklists and monographs, such as his systematic overview, reinforced Caprimulgiformes as a cohesive unit within traditional avian , influencing bodies like the American Ornithologists' Union. By the mid- to late , emerging evidence from and early molecular techniques began to challenge the of Caprimulgiformes, revealing potential with respect to due to shared aerial traits and skeletal similarities. Charles G. Sibley and Jon E. Ahlquist's pioneering DNA-DNA hybridization studies in the placed Apodiformes closely adjacent to Caprimulgiformes within a broader parvorder Caprimulgi, suggesting an inclusive "nightbirds" assemblage that united nocturnal and crepuscular forms while questioning strict boundaries. These findings sparked debates on the paraphyletic nature of traditional Caprimulgiformes, with proposals for expanded groups like "nightbirds" to better capture morphological and behavioral convergences among these lineages, setting the foundation for later molecular refinements.

Modern Developments

In the early , molecular and morphological analyses began to undermine the traditional of Caprimulgiformes, revealing its and a close affinity with . A seminal study by Johansson et al. (2001) utilized nuclear DNA sequences to propose that Caprimulgiformes and formed a supported within higher land birds, challenging prior classifications. Complementing this, Mayr (2002) provided osteological evidence demonstrating that Caprimulgiformes excluded certain nocturnal families like frogmouths and potoos, which nested outside the core lineage. These findings culminated in the comprehensive morphological cladistic analysis by Livezey and Zusi (2007), which confirmed the paraphyly of Caprimulgiformes and elevated the combined group to a major neoavian , setting the stage for its formal recognition. Building on this foundation, the and saw integrative approaches refine Strisores' internal structure through combined molecular and morphological data. Mayr (2010) explicitly introduced the name Strisores for the encompassing all traditional Caprimulgiformes plus , based on shared osteological synapomorphies like the strisore bill morphology. A key advancement came from Chen et al. (2019), who applied a total-evidence framework to 48 taxa, uncovering complex in skeletal traits across Strisores lineages and identifying novel synapomorphies for subclades such as nightjars and allies. More recently, Stiller et al. (2024) leveraged whole-genome data from 217 bird species to construct a timetree that robustly resolved family-level relationships within Strisores, confirming its and placing it as sister to other neoavian groups like Cursorimorphae. Nomenclature for this clade has sparked debate, particularly between Strisores (defined as the crown group of extant members) and Caprimulgimorphae (encompassing the total group including stem fossils). Chen and Field (2020) formalized phylogenetic definitions under the International Code of , prioritizing Strisores for the living radiation while reserving Caprimulgimorphae for broader inclusivity. This resolution has led to widespread adoption in major avian checklists; for instance, the International Ornithological Congress (IOC) World Bird List recognizes Strisores as a higher comprising approximately 600 across eight families, including diverse forms from hummingbirds to nightjars. Similarly, the Handbook of the Birds of the World (HBW) and incorporate Strisores in their phylogenetic frameworks, reflecting its status as a consensus in contemporary .

Systematics

Phylogenetic Relationships

Strisores is positioned as a basal clade within Neoaves, the largest radiation of modern birds. Early large-scale genomic analyses, such as Prum et al. (2015), which utilized 259 anchored hybrid enrichment loci across 48 bird orders, recovered Strisores as the sister group to all other neoavians with strong support (bootstrap >95%). Subsequent studies have refined this placement; for example, a 2024 phylogenomic analysis of family-level genomes using coalescent-based methods on 63,430 intergenic loci positioned Strisores within the Elementaves clade of Neoaves, as sister to Phaethoquornithes (a group including tropicbirds and waterbirds) with moderate posterior probability (0.90), while concatenated analyses suggested a sister relationship to Telluraves (landbirds like eagles and woodpeckers) albeit with low bootstrap support (32%). Internally, Strisores exhibits a structure where Daedalornithes—encompassing (swifts and hummingbirds) and Aegothelidae (owlet-nightjars)—forms a robust , supported by shared aerial adaptations and molecular synapomorphies. This Daedalornithes is typically to Caprimulgimorphae, the "nightbird" lineage including nightjars, potoos, s, and s. However, the precise arrangement within Caprimulgimorphae shows variation; a 2019 total-evidence study integrating molecular and morphological data resolved nightjars (Caprimulgidae) as to the remaining strisores, with s and potoos forming a to s plus Daedalornithes, though earlier multi-gene analyses had left and positions more ambiguous due to limited sampling. These phylogenetic relationships are bolstered by comprehensive multi-locus datasets, notably the framework that combined 2,353,369 base pairs from 2,289 nuclear loci with 117 morphological characters, achieving high posterior probabilities (>0.99) for key nodes and resolving longstanding uncertainties in nightbird diversification. Morphological , particularly syrinx traits such as the presence of a bronchosyrinx and specialized syringeal musculature, provides additional support for Strisores and subclade boundaries, as evidenced by comparative anatomical studies within and their strisore relatives.

Included Taxa

Strisores comprises approximately 600 extant across eight families, primarily nocturnal or crepuscular birds with specialized aerial or foraging adaptations. The includes the nightjars and allies in Caprimulgidae (about 100 , known for cryptic and insectivorous nocturnal flights), potoos in Nyctibiidae (7 , with elongated postures for ), the monotypic in Steatornithidae (1 , notable for echolocation in dark caves), frogmouths in Podargidae (16 , featuring broad gapes for prey capture), owlet-nightjars in Aegothelidae (11 , small owl-like forms with capability), swifts in Apodidae (106 , highly aerial with prolonged flights), in Hemiprocnidae (4 , crested aerial insectivores), and hummingbirds in Trochilidae (366 as of 2025, capable of sustained hovering). Taxonomic authorities vary in their treatment of orders within Strisores. The IOC World Bird List recognizes six orders: Caprimulgiformes (Caprimulgidae only), Nyctibiiformes (Nyctibiidae), Steatornithiformes (Steatornithidae), Podargiformes (Podargidae), Aegotheliformes (Aegothelidae), and (Apodidae, Hemiprocnidae, and Trochilidae), reflecting phylogenetic separations based on molecular data. Birds of the World, integrating Handbook of the Birds of the World and perspectives, adopts a similar multi-order structure, elevating each nightbird family to ordinal rank while maintaining for swifts and hummingbirds. Earlier classifications, such as those prior to 2020, often lumped the nightbirds into a broader Caprimulgiformes alongside , but recent genomic studies support the finer divisions.

Evolution

Fossil Record

The fossil record of Strisores is primarily confined to the , with the earliest definitive representatives appearing in the Early Eocene and no unambiguous records from the Period, consistent with a post-Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) boundary origin for the . This scarcity of pre-Eocene fossils underscores the challenges in tracing the deep origins of Strisores, as avian diversification accelerated in the wake of the K-Pg mass extinction. Among the oldest known Strisores fossils are those of primitive apodiform-like forms from North America, such as Eocypselus rowei from the Fossil Butte Member of the Green River Formation in Wyoming, dated to approximately 51.7 Ma. This species, represented by a feathered partial skeleton, exhibits a wing morphology intermediate between modern swifts and hummingbirds, providing evidence of early aerial adaptations within the pan-Apodiformes stem lineage. Similarly, Prefica nivea, a stem steatornithiform (related to the oilbird), is documented from the same formation around 50 Ma based on a nearly complete skeleton that shares key mandibular and tarsometatarsal features with extant Steatornithidae. These North American specimens highlight an initial diversification of diurnal and crepuscular aerialists shortly after the K-Pg event. In , contemporaneous Early Eocene fossils further illustrate the rapid emergence of Strisores diversity. Multiple species of Eocypselus, including E. vincenti and newly described taxa such as E. geminus and E. grandissimus, are known from the London Clay Formation at , , dated to about 55 Ma; these partial skeletons suggest varied ecological roles, from forest-edge sallying to more open-air foraging. Primapus lacki, an early aegialornithid linking to modern swifts (Apodidae), is also recorded from this locality and the Green River Formation, with a partial skeleton revealing adaptations for fast, sustained flight typical of crown-group . Later Paleogene records include significant non-apodiform taxa, such as Archaeodromus anglicus from the same site (~55 Ma), a stem caprimulgiform represented by a partial postcranial including the quadrate and ; its morphology supports close affinities to nightjars (Caprimulgidae) and elucidates early nocturnal or crepuscular specializations within Strisores. Paraprefica kelleri and P. major, stem-group potoos (Nyctibiidae), occur in the Messel Pit, (~48 Ma), predating some European relatives and indicating transatlantic dispersal patterns in early Strisores evolution. Additional finds, like Hassiavis laticauda from Messel (~48 Ma), provide detailed of archaeotrogonids, reinforcing their position as basal caprimulgimorphs. Despite this richness, notable gaps persist in the Strisores fossil record. Forms such as Cypselavus gallicus from the late Eocene to early Quercy fissures in remain phylogenetically unresolved, with fragmentary limb bones suggesting possible apodiform affinities but lacking sufficient material for precise placement. The absence of pre-Eocene fossils, coupled with the sudden appearance of diverse lineages by the mid-Early Eocene, points to potential taphonomic biases or an explosive radiation immediately following the K-Pg extinction, though molecular clocks suggest deeper roots that remain unrepresented in the geological record.

Origins and Diversification

analyses indicate that the origins of Strisores trace back to the or Early , approximately 60–55 million years ago (mya), coinciding with the aftermath of the Cretaceous– (K–Pg) extinction event around 66 mya. Estimates for the total-group of key lineages, such as nightjars (Caprimulgidae), place their emergence at 61–64 mya, while crown-group Strisores likely originated in the , enabling survival and initial radiation among the few neoavian clades that persisted through the mass extinction of non-avian dinosaurs and many contemporaneous birds. The Eocene epoch marked a pivotal phase of radiation in the , where strisorean aerial specialists adapted to recovering forested habitats following global at the K–Pg boundary. Fossil evidence from early Eocene sites in (e.g., Messel Pit, ) and (e.g., Green River Formation, ) demonstrates that most major subclades, including stem representatives of swifts, hummingbirds, and nightjars, had diverged by the middle Eocene, around 50–40 mya. For instance, the swift-like Eocypselus from the early Eocene highlights early adaptations for aerial foraging in woodland environments. Subsequent Miocene expansions into tropical latitudes further drove diversification, with lineages like nightjars colonizing new regions such as around 20–15 mya. Recent genomic studies, including Stiller et al. (2024), corroborate these timelines, estimating the divergence of (swifts and hummingbirds) at approximately 50 mya. Key evolutionary drivers included the development of specialized aerial lifestyles, which positioned Strisores to capitalize on post-K–Pg ecological opportunities, such as the proliferation of insects in forests amid ecosystem recovery. This aerial insectivory, seen across diurnal and nocturnal forms, facilitated exploitation of vacant niches left by extinct arboreal birds, promoting rapid morphological and ecological divergence within the .

Ecology and Distribution

Habitats and Range

Strisores display a predominantly tropical and subtropical distribution across the globe, with the highest in the Neotropics, where the family Trochilidae includes approximately 366 species endemic to the and spanning from southward to . Swifts in the family Apodidae achieve a nearly cosmopolitan range, occurring on all continents except and adapting to diverse environments from sea level to elevations exceeding 4,000 meters. In contrast, nightjars of the family Caprimulgidae exhibit widespread distribution across non-polar regions, excluding , and occupy varied open and forested landscapes from deserts to urban areas. Potoos (Nyctibiidae) are confined to the Neotropics, inhabiting dense lowland and montane forests from to northern , while the (Steatornithidae) is found in northern from Trinidad and south to and , utilizing caves for roosting. Frogmouths (Podargidae) are distributed across and , while owlet-nightjars (Aegothelidae) are primarily , favoring woodlands and rainforests in , , the Moluccas, and . These patterns reflect the clade's evolutionary diversification, with approximately 600 species total contributing to its broad ecological footprint. Habitat preferences within Strisores emphasize aerial and crepuscular adaptations, with swifts and hummingbirds exploiting open skies over forests, shrublands, and even arid zones, while nightjars, potoos, frogmouths, and owlet-nightjars seek dense vegetation or roosts in forests for concealment. Altitudinal distribution is extensive, from coastal lowlands to highland paramos and montane zones, as exemplified by hummingbirds ascending to over 4,500 meters in the Andes. Biogeographically, Australasian endemics highlight Gondwanan influences, and some taxa, such as the Anna's hummingbird, have exhibited northward range expansions linked to warming climates and human-modified habitats.

Diet and Foraging

Members of Strisores exhibit predominantly insectivorous diets, capturing prey through diverse aerial and nocturnal foraging strategies adapted to their crepuscular or nighttime activity. Nightjars (Caprimulgidae) primarily hawk flying such as moths, beetles, and during twilight and moonlight hours, using short, weak bills combined with a wide gape lined by tactile rictal bristles to funnel prey into the mouth while in flight. Similarly, potoos (Nyctibiidae) employ a sit-and-sally technique from perches, sallying forth to capture large flying like beetles and moths, with occasional small vertebrates. Frogmouths (Podargidae), such as the , ambush , spiders, and small vertebrates including frogs and from elevated perches, relying on their broad, hooked bills to snatch prey from foliage or the ground. Swifts (Apodidae) pursue airborne arthropods, including bees, termites, and beetles, in high-speed aerial chases that can span hours, reflecting their continuous flight capabilities and aerial . Hummingbirds (Trochilidae), while also consuming caught in flight or from webs, derive most energy from and , hovering precisely at flowers and using extensible, tubular tongues to probe and extract fluids with rapid licking motions. This nectarivory demands exceptional energy budgets; hummingbirds may consume two to three times their body weight in daily to fuel their high metabolic rates. An exception within the is the (Steatornithidae), the only nocturnal among Strisores, foraging on lipid-rich fruits from palms and laurels at night using echolocation to navigate and locate food in dark forests. These specialized diets and techniques underscore the clade's ecological versatility, with aerial insectivory likely ancestral to the group.

References

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