The family Caenagnathidae, together with its sister group the
Oviraptoridae, comprises the superfamily
Caenagnathoidea. In
phylogenetic taxonomy, the
clade Caenagnathidae is defined as the most inclusive group containing
Caenagnathus collinsi but not
Oviraptor philoceratops. While before 2010s only about two to six species were commonly recognized as belonging to the Caenagnathidae, currently that number may be much greater, with new discoveries and theories about older species that may inflate this number to up to ten. Much of this historical difference centers on the first caenagnathid to be described,
Chirostenotes pergracilis. Due to the poor preservation of most caenagnathid remains and resulting misidentifications, different bones and different specimens of
Chirostenotes have historically been assigned to a number of different species. For example, the feet of one species, named
Macrophalangia canadensis, were known from the same region from which
Chirostenotes pergracilis was recovered, but the discovery of a new specimen with both hands and feet preserved Hendrickx and colleagues (2015) defined a subgroup of Caenagnathidae, the
Caenagnathinae, as all caenagnathids more closely related to
Caenagnathus collinsi than to
Elmisaurus rarus. The group
Elmisaurinae is defined as including all species more closely related to
Elmisaurus rarus than to
Caenagnathus collinsi. The
cladogram below follows an analysis by Gregory Funston in 2020. {{Clade|{{clade
Evolution The earliest known caenagnathid is
Microvenator celer, from the Early Cretaceous
Cloverly Formation. Caenagnathids likely dispersed to Asia from North America with some caenagnathids later reappearing in western North America, during the Campanian. Caenagnathids showed considerable variation in form. The tiny jaws of
Caenagnathasia suggest a small animal, perhaps the size of a turkey.
Anzu wyliei, from the Hell Creek Formation is a much larger animal, considerably larger than a human. If
Gigantoraptor erlianensis is a caenagnathid, then it would represent far and away the largest member of the group, measuring up to in length and weighing up to . Their beaks also show considerable variation; that of
Caenagnathasia is relatively short and deep, while that of
Caenagnathus is long and shovel-shaped. This variation in size and beak shape suggests that caenagnathids evolved to exploit a range of ecological niches. Caenagnathids persisted up until the end of the Cretaceous period, as shown by the presence of
Anzu and another, unnamed species of elmisaurine (all caenagnathids closer to
Elmisaurus than to
Caenagnathus) in the late Maastrichtian Hell Creek Formation, before vanishing at the end of the Cretaceous along with all other non-avian dinosaurs. •
Anzu wyliei - (
Hell Creek Formation, North Dakota and South Dakota, United States) The earliest and most primitive known caenagnathid is
Caenagnathasia martinsoni, from the Bissekty Formation of Uzbekistan. ==See also==