T. wetmorei was initially placed in the presumed
pelecaniform family Cyphornithidae, which had been placed in the "
pelecaniform"
suborder Cladornithes, together with two other misidentified pseudotooth birds –
Palaeochenoides and the family's
type genus Cyphornis. The
type genus of that supposed suborder, the enigmatic Late Oligocene
Cladornis from the
Argentinian part of
Patagonia, like the present species is only known from a distal right tarsometatarsus end. This was believed to be reminiscent of the (then still undescribed)
Tympanonesiotes, and thus it was argued that all four genera were closely related. But
Cladornis is more generally held to be a
terrestrial bird of unclear affiliations rather than a
seabird nowadays, and the Cladornithes are not used anymore by recent authors. As regards the supposed Cyphornithidae, most if not all pseudotooth birds placed there are probably closely related to the better-known
Pelagornis,
type genus of the family Pelagornithidae. And even if
Cyphornis is the
senior synonym of
Palaeochenoides and
Tympanoneisiotes (which is not overly likely), according to the rules of
zoological nomenclature the family name Pelagornithidae would not be affected. Thus Cyphornithidae would almost certainly be a
junior synonym of Pelagornithidae even if the pseudotooth birds are (as some have proposed) divided into several families – rather than being all placed in the Pelagornithidae as is usual nowadays – as
Cyphornis,
Osteodontornis,
Palaeochenoides,
Pelagornis and perhaps
Tympanoneisiotes appear to be very closely related and are probably part of a
monophyletic lineage of (usually) giant pseudotooth birds. ==Footnotes==