Chatham fernbird

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Chatham fernbird
Bullers fernbirds.jpg
Chatham fernbird below

Extinct  (1900) (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Locustellidae
Genus: Poodytes
Species:
P. rufescens
Binomial name
Poodytes rufescens
(Buller, 1869)
Synonyms

Bowdleria rufescens
Megalurus rufescens

The Chatham fernbird (Poodytes rufescens) is an extinct bird species that was endemic to the Chatham Islands. It was historically known only from Mangere Island, but fossils have been found on Pitt Island and Chatham Island as well. Its closest living relative is the New Zealand fernbird or matata (Poodytes punctatus). It was formerly treated as a subspecies of the New Zealand fernbird, but is now widely recognized as its own species. Both fernbirds were formerly placed in their own genus Bowdleria; they were later moved to Megalurus and most recently Poodytes.

Description[]

Chatham fernbird above

The Chatham fernbird reached a length of 18 cm. It wings were 5.9 to 6.7 cm. In contrast to the New Zealand fernbird, it had unspotted white underparts, a chestnut brown crown, a distinct white loral spot, and a dark red-brown back. It was insectivorous but nothing more is known about its ecology.[2]

Extinction[]

Image of Chatham fernbird mount from the collection of Auckland Museum
Chatham fernbird mount from the collection of Auckland Museum

The first individual known to science was collected in 1868 by New Zealand naturalist Charle Traill on Mangere Island by "knocking it over with a stone". He sent it to Sir Walter Buller who described it as a new species in 1869. In 1871 the population was described[by whom?] as rather common on Mangere but reduced on Pitt Island. The reasons for its extinction were apparently brush fires, overgrazing by goats and rabbits and predation by rats and feral cats. The last specimen was shot for the collection of Lionel Walter Rothschild in 1895 shortly after the introduction of cats to Mangere Island, and it was regarded as extinct by 1900.[3]

Museums specimens can be seen in the Auckland War Memorial Museum, in the Harvard Museum of Natural History, Berlin, Chicago, Christchurch, in the Natural History Museum, in the World Museum Liverpool, in the American Museum of Natural History, in Paris, in Pittsburgh and in Stockholm.

References[]

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2016). "Poodytes rufescens". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T22728902A95000164. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T22728902A95000164.en. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  2. ^ Greenway, James (1967): Extinct and Vanishing Birds of the World
  3. ^ Day, David (1981): The Doomsday Book of Animals

Further reading[]

  • Greenway, James (1967): Extinct and Vanishing Birds of the World
  • Day, David (1981): The Doomsday Book of Animals
  • Fuller, Errol (2000): Extinct Birds
  • Flannery, Tim & Schouten, Peter (2001): A Gap in Nature

External links[]

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