The Maniraptora was originally named by
Jacques Gauthier in 1986, for a
branch-based clade defined as all dinosaurs closer to modern birds than to the
ornithomimids. Gauthier noted that this group could be easily characterized by their long forelimbs and hands, which he interpreted as adaptations for grasping (hence the name Maniraptora, which means "hand snatchers" in relation to their 'seizing hands'). In 1994,
Thomas R. Holtz attempted to define the group based on the characteristics of the hand and wrist alone (an
apomorphy-based definition), and included the long, thin fingers, bowed, wing-like forearm bones, and half-moon shaped wrist bone as key characters. Most subsequent studies have not followed this definition, however, preferring the earlier branch-based definition. The branch-based definition usually includes the major groups
Dromaeosauridae,
Troodontidae,
Oviraptorosauria,
Therizinosauria, and
Avialae. Other taxa often found to be maniraptorans include the
alvarezsaurs and
Ornitholestes. Several taxa have been assigned to the Maniraptora more definitively, though their exact placement within the group remains uncertain. These forms include the
scansoriopterygids,
Pedopenna, and
Yixianosaurus. In 1993, Perle and colleagues coined the name
Metornithes to include alvarezsaurids and modern birds, which the researchers believed were members of the Avialae. This group was defined as a clade by Luis Chiappe in 1995 as the last common ancestor of
Mononykus and modern birds, and all its descendants. Pennaraptora (Latin
penna "bird feather" +
raptor "thief", from
rapere "snatch"; a feathered bird-like predator) is a
clade within Maniraptora, defined as the most recent common ancestor of
Oviraptor philoceratops,
Deinonychus antirrhopus, and
Passer domesticus (the house sparrow), and all descendants thereof, by Foth
et al., 2014. The clade "Aviremigia" was conditionally proposed along with several other
apomorphy-based clades relating to
birds by
Jacques Gauthier and
Kevin de Queiroz in a 2001 paper. Their proposed definition for the group was "the clade stemming from the first
panavian with ...
remiges and
rectrices, that is, enlarged, stiff-shafted, closed-vaned (= barbules bearing hooked distal pennulae), pennaceous feathers arising from the distal forelimbs and tail". Ancestral morphology relating to pennaceous feathers suggests that basal species of Pennaraptora were capable of scansorial locomotion and gliding, and further evolution of said adaptation within the clade would eventually give rise to the origin of flight in avian species. The following
cladogram follows the results of a phylogenetic study by Cau (2020).
Alternative interpretations In 2002, Czerkas and Yuan reported that some maniraptoran traits, such as a long, backwards-pointed
pubis and short
ischia were present in
Scansoriopteryx, a scansoriopterygid. The authors considered it to be more primitive than true theropods, and hypothesized that maniraptorans may have branched off from theropods at a very early point, or may even have descended from pre-theropod dinosaurs. Zhang
et al., in describing the closely related or conspecific specimen
Epidendrosaurus (now considered a synonym of
Scansoriopteryx), did not report any of the primitive traits mentioned by Czerkas and Yuan, but did find that the shoulder blade of
Epidendrosaurus appeared primitive. Despite this, they placed
Epidendrosaurus firmly within Maniraptora due to a number of synapomorphies. ==Paleobiology==