- Long-legged Bunting
Taxobox
name =Long-legged Bunting
status = Fossil
status_system =
image_width =
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo = Passeriformes
familia =Emberizidae
genus = "Emberiza "
species = "E. alcoveri"
binomial = "Emberiza alcoveri"
binomial_authority = Rando, Lopez, and Segui,1999 The Long-legged Bunting ("Emberiza alcoveri") is anextinct flightless species of bunting. It was distinguishable by its long legs and short wings, and it inhabited theCanary Islands . It is one of the few flightlessPasserine s known to science, all of which are extinct.Taxonomy
This bunting belongs to the "
Emberiza " genus, and is closest related to theCabanis's Bunting ("E. ") and theYellowhammer ("E. citrinella").cite journal|last= Rando|first= J. C.|coauthors= Lopez, M.; Segui, B. |year= 1999|month= February|title= A NEW SPECIES OF EXTINCT FLIGHTLESS PASSERINE|journal= The Condor|volume= 101|issue= 1|pages= 1–13|id= |url= http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:0tZQA0bDZkAJ:elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Condor/files/issues/v101n01/p0001-p0013.pdf+A+New+Species+of+Extinct+Flightless&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=3&gl=us&client=safari|accessdate= 2008-08-01] "Emberiza" is a genus inside the Bunting family, Emberizidae, which is made up of small, seed-eating birds with distinctive bill shapes.cite book |editor=Forshaw, Joseph|author= Baptista, Luis F.|year=1991|title=Encyclopaedia of Animals: Birds|publisher= Merehurst Press|location=London|pages= 210–212|isbn= 1-85391-186-0] The species name, "alcoveri", is in honor ofJ. A. Alcover , who contributed to fossil fauna knowledge and information.Description
The
holotype of the Long-legged Bunting is a partial skeleton. Seven other associated skeletons were found.cite web|url=http://home.planet.nl/~by000012/SM/Fossil/FossilFringilli.htm|title=Fossil records for the family Finches and Allies|work=KPN.com|accessdate=2008-08-01] The bones are held at theUniversity of La Laguna , inTenerife, Spain . This species was distinguishable from other buntings as it was larger than existing "Emberiza" species and had longer legs, shorter wings, and a differently-shaped bill. These features indicate that the Long-legged Bunting was a ground dweller and likely flightless. This makes it one of the few known flightlessPasserine s known, the others being theStephens Island Wren ("Xenicus lyalli") and the Long-billed Wren ("Dendroscansor decurvirostris"). Both of these wrens are extinct. This bunting probably wasomnivorous , like the other species in its genus. It likely ateseed s andinvertebrate s. However, because of its differently-shaped bill, harder seeds could have been included in its diet.Distribution and habitat
The Long-legged Bunting was a native of the
Canary Islands . Bones from this species have only been found in the volcanic cave Cueva del Viento, on the island ofTenerife . Other species that lived alongside this bunting include various birds, mammals, and lizards. This species likely lived in theLaurel forest or the transition forest, as food would be plentiful and the herb layer would protect against aerial predators.Extinction
The Long-legged Bunting had lived in the Canary Islands during the
Upper Pleistocene to theHolocene . Humans arrived over 2,000 years ago, bringing with theminvasive species such asgoat s,pig s,cat s, andsheep . The Europeans impacted the land even more when they arrived, introducingrat s to the islands and cultivating the land. The Long-legged Bunting was driven to extinction because of these invasive species and the destruction of their habitat.References
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