This revolutionary reordering has been widely accepted by North American ornithologists, including the American Ornithologists Union[?], but in other parts of the world its effect has been more evolutionary: it has been a respected major influence on existing classification schemes, as opposed to a complete replacement for them.
A more recent paper looked at the ancestry of bird groups. The traditional view of avian evolution places ratites and tinamous at the base of the tree of modern birds (Neornithes), followed by old marine groups such as the penguins, grebes and divers (loons).
The new research suggested that the ducks and gallinaceous birds are each other?s closest relatives and together form the basal lineage of neognathous birds. The ratites and tinamous will now be followed by the ducks and their allies, and then the rails and crakes.
This latter research has been accepted by the British Ornithogists' Union[?], and the British list will now start with Anseriformes and Galliformes
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