The family Cathartidae was introduced (as the subfamily Cathartinae) by the French ornithologist
Frédéric de Lafresnaye in 1839. The New World vultures comprise seven species in five genera, being
Coragyps,
Cathartes,
Gymnogyps,
Sarcoramphus, and
Vultur. Of these, only
Cathartes is not
monotypic. The family's scientific name, Cathartidae, comes from
cathartes, Greek for "purifier". Although New World vultures and
Old World vultures are not very closely related, they share many resemblances because of
convergent evolution. Phylogenetic analyses including all Cathartidae species found two primary clades. The first consists of black vultures (
Coragyps atratus) together with the three
Cathartes species (lesser yellow-headed vultures
(C. burrovianus), greater yellow-headed
vultures (C. melambrotus), and turkey vultures (
C. aura)), while the second consists of king vultures (
Sarcoramphus papa), California condors (
Gymnogyps californianus) and Andean condors (
Vultur gryphus).
New World vultures were traditionally placed in a family of their own in the Falconiformes. However, in the late 20th century some ornithologists argued that they are more closely related to
storks on the basis of
karyotype, morphological, and behavioral data. Thus some authorities placed them in the
Ciconiiformes with storks and
herons; Sibley and Monroe (1990) even considered them a subfamily of the storks. This was criticized, and an early DNA sequence study was based on erroneous data and subsequently retracted. There was then an attempt to raise the New World vultures to the rank of an independent order,
Cathartiformes, not closely associated with either the birds of prey or the storks and herons. Recent multi-locus DNA studies on the evolutionary relationships between bird groups indicate that New World vultures are related to the other birds of prey, excluding the Falconidae. This analysis argues that New World vultures should either be a part of a new order
Accipitriformes Both groups are
basal members of the recently recognized clade
Afroaves.
Extinct species and fossils The fossil history of the Cathartidae is complex, and many taxa that may possibly have been New World vultures have at some stage been treated as early representatives of the family. There is no unequivocal European record from the
Neogene. '' It is clear that the Cathartidae had a much higher diversity in the
Plio-Pleistocene, rivalling the current diversity of Old World vultures and their relatives in shapes, sizes, and ecological niches. Extinct taxa include: •
Diatropornis ("European vulture") Late Eocene/Early Oligocene – ?Middle Oligocene of France •
Phasmagyps Chadronian of
Colorado • Cathartidae gen. et sp. indet. Late Oligocene of Mongolia •
Aizenogyps ("South American vulture") Late Pliocene of SE North America •
Wingegyps Late Pleistocene of Brazil •
Pleistovultur Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene of Brazil • Cathartidae gen. et sp. indet. Cuba •
Gymnogyps amplus Late Pleistocene – Holocene of W North America •
Kuntur cardenasi (Stucchi et al. 2015) ==Description==