Eocypselus rowei is an extinct bird believed to be ancestral to modern hummingbirds and swifts. It was a small bird, less than 5inches in length, and probably had black feathers. The bird was first described in 2013 and lived approximately 50 million years ago, during the Eocene epoch.
Eocypselus rowei was first described in 2013 by Daniel T. Ksepka, Julia A. Clarke, Sterling J. Nesbitt, Felicia B. Kulp, and Lance Grande in the . The researchers spotted an exceptionally preserved specimen, originally harvested from the Green River Formation of Wyoming, while working at Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History.[1] The specimen includes well preserved feathers and a nearly complete skeleton. It contains fossilized melanosomes, pigmentation cell structures. They named the new species in honor of John Rowe, Chairman of the Field Museum's Board of Trustees.[2] The discoverers chose to honor Rowe, whom they considered to be a "fossil geek."[2]
According to its discoverers, E. rowei is a basal form of the order Apodiformes, which traditionally includes hummingbirds, tree swifts, and swifts.[3] Earlier authors reached the same conclusions based on European fossils of Eocypselus.[4] [5]
Eocypselus rowei shares features in common with both hummingbirds and swifts leading Ksepka to declare "This fossil bird represents the closest we've gotten to the point where swifts and hummingbirds went their separate ways".[6] It was probably not a hoverer, like a hummingbird, but also not a fast flyer like a swift. E. rowei was less than 5inches from head to tail. Its feathers made up more than half the size of its wingspan. The bird was small enough to fit into the palm of a hand and weighed less than 1oz. It probably had black plumage and may have had an iridescent sheen, like modern swifts.
Eocypselus rowei lived approximately 50 million years ago, during the Eocene epoch. It was probably an insectivore.