Fissuravis
|  Fissuravis Temporal range: Paleocene  | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia | 
| Phylum: | Chordata | 
| Class: | Aves | 
| Subclass: | Carinatae | 
| Infraclass: | Neornithes | 
| Superorder: | Paleognathae | 
| Order: | †Lithornithiformes | 
| Family: | Lithornithidae | 
| Genus: |  Fissuravis (Gerald Mayr, 2007)[1]  | 
| Species | |
| 
 †Fissuravis weigelti  | |
Fissuravis ("fissure bird") is a genus of extinct bird from the Paleocene of Germany. A lithornithid, it was closely related to modern ratites, but it was a capable flyer.[1]
Ecology
Hailing from the Walbeck Paleocene deposits, it is found amidst a rich avian fauna, which also included the gigantic Gastornis and the enigmatic ratite Remiornis.
Like most lithornithids, it was probably a very competent flyer, its coracoid remnants suggesting powerful flight musculature, and it likely engaged in a similar style of soaring flight to Lithornis and Pseudocrypturus.[1]
References
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