Eleutherornis cotei is an extinct flightless Cariamiformes bird which lived during the Lutetian of France and Switzerland. Since the early 20th century, researchers have initially described the fossils of Eleutherornis as separate taxa, some remains as a species of Gastornis and others as an ancient ratite related to modern . However, subsequent analyses have questioned the original interpretations, and a thorough reexamination in 2013 indicated that all of these described remains represent the same species.
It is estimated that Eleutherornis is a relatively tall bird that could grow up to in total height. Paleontologists now agree that Eleutherornis certainly belongs to the order Cariamiformes, which includes the modern and the extinct Phorusrhacidae, a group of flightless predatory birds mainly known from the Americas. This makes Eleutherornis a relative of the phorusrhacids, with some researchers even suggesting that Eleutherornis is a European member of this group, though this claim has been disputed by others and additional material may be required for confirmation.
Subsequent analyses questioned the original interpretations, with D.? cotei considered as Aves incertae sedis outside the genus Gastornis, and with E. helveticus considered as a non-struthiform and a possible phorusrhacid instead. In 2009, the German paleontologist Gerald Mayr suggested that both D.? cotei and E. helveticus are Neognathae and they possibly belong the same clade, while considering the putative ratite affinities of Proceriavis to be uncertain. This was confirmed through the reexaminations and comparisons of the specimens by Angst and colleagues in 2013, who considered both D.? cotei and E. helveticus to represent the same species based on virtually identical material and recombined the name of the taxon as Eleutherornis cotei.
Because the known fossils are fragmentary, definitive phylogenetic classification cannot be conducted, and Mayr still suggested that it is likely closer to Strigogyps in 2022, based on a biogeographical viewpoint and a morphological similarity of the tarsometatarsus and curved ungual phalanges from both taxa. While tentatively classified as a phorusrhacid in their 2024 study, LaBarge, Garderner and Organ excluded both Eleutherornis and Lavocatavis from phylogenetic analysis and considered their identity as phorusrhacids highly questionable. Supplementary Information
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