The classification of various species assigned to the genus
Cimolopteryx has changed over the years, and many species once thought to belong to this genus have been reclassified or deemed indeterminate. As of a re-evaluation of the fossil remains in 2002 by Sylvia Hope, at most five species were recognized:
Cimolopteryx rara,
C. petra,
C. maxima,
C. minima, and one yet-unnamed species.
C. rara and
C. petra were considered almost identical, and found in the same environments (the Lance and Frenchman formations), but differed in size, with
C. petra smaller than
C. rara. In a 2009 review, Nicholas Longrich synonymized them as the same species, dismissing the size difference as possibly based on sex or growth stage. However, Longrich reversed his position following a 2011 analysis of Lancian birds, in which he and co-authors considered all four named species to be distinct.
C. minima and
C. petra were transferred to the new genus
Lamarqueavis by Federico Agnolin in 2010, based on their similarity to the South American species
L. australis. An additional species from the much earlier Dinosaur Park Formation of Alberta has also since been re-evaluated as a probable species of
Lamarqueavis rather than
Cimolopteryx. '
"Cimolopteryx
" maxima'''
was about twice the size of C. rara
, but not enough of its anatomy is known to confidently determine if it belongs to Cimolopteryx
or a different genus. In 2011, Longrich concluded that it was probably distinct, but did not name a new genus for it. Several collections of material that is similar to Cimolopteryx
were referred to by Hope as undetermined species, which lack enough unique characteristics to be properly identified, and these may or may not belong to Cimolopteryx''. Hope regarded
Cimolopteryx as a likely member of the modern bird group
Charadriiformes, which includes a diverse array of shorebirds. However, since all species are known only from parts of the shoulder girdle and wing bone fragments, this classification is tentative, and a phylogenetic analysis failed to resolve the exact relationships of the many fragmentary Lancian-age bird species. Agnolin looked at anatomical similarities between the various species' coracoid bones, and concluded that
Cimolopteryx and
Lamarqueavis could be grouped together, along with
Ceramornis, in a distinct family, the
Cimolopterygidae. ==References==