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			 The work by researchers from 20 countries helps clarify the 
			evolutionary relationships of modern bird groups and reveals the 
			genetic underpinning of traits such as singing, toothlessness, 
			colorful feathers and color vision. 
 The scientists decoded the genomes, an organism's genetic material, 
			of 45 bird species and analyzed those of three others previously 
			sequenced. The list covered nearly all living bird groups.
 
 The species included penguins, falcons, eagles, woodpeckers, owls, 
			vultures, pelicans, cranes, crows, hornbills, cormorants, 
			hummingbirds, pigeons, ducks, chickens, turkeys, ostriches, finches, 
			loons, flamingos, swifts, and even the White-throated Tinamou.
 
 "We have produced a well-resolved bird family tree and provided a 
			clear picture of how the modern birds originated and evolved," said 
			geneticist Guojie Zhang of the BGI genome research center in 
			Shenzhen, China and the University of Copenhagen.
 
			
			 Scientists think birds evolved from small, feathered dinosaurs. The 
			earliest known bird, Archaeopteryx, lived 150 million years ago.
 The researchers said most bird lineages from the age of dinosaurs 
			disappeared during the mass extinction roughly 65 million years ago 
			thought to have resulted from an asteroid striking Earth.
 
 "Birds are dinosaurs. They're the one lineage of dinosaurs that made 
			it through the mass extinction," University of Florida biology 
			professor Ed Braun said.
 
 The analysis focused on a group called Neoaves that includes nearly 
			all of today's 10,000-plus bird species. Its evolutionary explosion 
			spanned 10 to 15 million years following the mass extinction, which 
			opened numerous ecological niches previously occupied by other 
			dinosaurs and flying reptiles called pterosaurs.
 
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			This "big bang" diversification of species gave rise to 95 percent 
			of today's birds, Duke University Medical School neurobiologist 
			Erich Jarvis said.
 The large flightless birds like the ostrich were confirmed as the 
			family tree's oldest branch. The scientists said the chicken genome 
			is probably the closest of any species to the ancestor of birds.
 
 The research found singing evolved independently in songbirds, 
			parrots and hummingbirds and showed that the set of about 50 genes 
			involved in birdsong is similar to those involved in human speech.
 
 Crocodiles were found to be birds' closest living relatives, with a 
			common ancestor 240 million years ago.
 
 The research was published on Thursday in the journal Science and 
			other publications.
 
 (Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by James Dalgleish)
 
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