The
phylogeny and
taxonomy of Coelurosauria has been subject to intensive research and revision. For many years, Coelurosauria was a 'dumping ground' for all small theropods. In the 1960s several distinctive lineages of coelurosaurs were recognized, and a number of new infraorders were erected, including the
Ornithomimosauria,
Deinonychosauria, and
Oviraptorosauria. During the 1980s and 1990s, paleontologists began to give Coelurosauria a formal definition, usually as all animals closer to birds than to
Allosaurus, or equivalent specifiers. Under this modern definition, many small theropods are not classified as coelurosaurs at all, and some large theropods, such as the
tyrannosaurids, were actually more advanced than allosaurs and therefore were reclassified as giant coelurosaurs. Even more drastically, the
segnosaurs, once not even regarded as theropods, have turned out to be non-carnivorous coelurosaurs related to
Therizinosaurus. Senter (2007) listed 59 different published phylogenies since 1984. Those since 2005 have followed almost the same pattern, and differ significantly from many older phylogenies. In 1994, a study by
paleontologist Thomas Holtz found a close relationship between the
Ornithomimosauria and
Troodontidae, and named this group
Bullatosauria. Holtz rejected this hypothesis in 1999, and most paleontologists now consider troodontids to be much more closely related to either
birds or
Dromaeosauridae than they are to ornithomimosaurs, causing the Bullatosauria to be abandoned. The name referred to the inflated (bulbous)
sphenoid both groups shared. Holtz defined the group as the clade containing the most recent common ancestor of
Troodon and
Ornithomimus and all its descendants. The concept is now considered redundant, and the clade Bullatosauria is now viewed as synonymous with Maniraptoriformes. In 2002,
Gregory S. Paul named an apomorphy-based clade
Avepectora, defined to include all theropods with a bird-like arrangement of the pectoral bones, where the angled shoulder girdle (coracoids) come in contact with the breastbone (sternum). According to Paul, ornithomimosaurs are the most
basal members of this group. In 2010, Paul used Avepectora for a smaller clade, excluding ornithomimosaurs, compsognathids and alvarezsauroids. Within Coelurosauria exists a slightly less inclusive
clade named
Tyrannoraptora. This clade was defined by Sereno (1999) as "
Tyrannosaurus rex,
Passer domesticus (the house sparrow), their
last common ancestor, and all of its descendants". As tyrannosauroids are considered to be the most basal large group within Coelurosauria, this means that the common ancestor of tyrannosauroids and birds was an even more basal coelurosaurian. As a result, almost all coelurosaurians are also tyrannoraptorans, with the only exceptions being particularly basal species such as
Zuolong salleei or Sciurumimus albersdoerferi. Several recently-named clades have been proposed to define the structure of Coelurosauria crownward of basal groups such as tyrannosauroids and compsognathids.
Maniraptoromorpha, defined by Andrea Cau in 2018, includes all coelurosaurians more closely related to birds than to tyrannosauroids. Cau stated that the synapomorphies of the clade included "Keel or carinae in the postaxial cervical centra, absence of hyposphene-hypantra in caudal vertebrae (reversal to the plesiomorphic theropodan condition), a prominent dorsomedial process on the semilunate carpal, a convex ventral margin of the pubic foot, a subrectangular distal end of the tibia and a sulcus along the posterior margin of the proximal end of the fibula." Another proposed clade is
Neocoelurosauria, erected by Hendrickx, Mateus, Araújo and Choiniere (2019), They define it as "the clade Compsognathidae + Maniraptoriformes", which can be more or less inclusive than Maniraptoromorpha depending on the topology. The last, and most exclusive of these proposed subclades is
Maniraptoriformes. Maniraptoriformes is a
clade which may have been united by the presence of
pennaceous feathers and wings. This clade contains
ornithomimosaurs and
maniraptorans. The group was named by
Thomas Holtz, who defined it as "the most recent common ancestor of
Ornithomimus and
birds, and all descendants of that common ancestor." One of the possible
synapomorphies of this clade is the presence of feathers homologous to those of birds, based on study of a specimen of
Shuvuuia. The following family tree illustrates a synthesis of the relationships of the major coelurosaurian groups based on various studies conducted in the 2010s. }} }} }} ==See also==