- Giant Hoopoe
Taxobox
name = Giant Hoopoe
status = EX | status_system = IUCN3.1
extinct = Early 16th. century
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo =Coraciiformes
familia =Upupidae
genus = "Upupa "
species = "U. antaios"
binomial = "Upupa antaios"
binomial_authority = (Olson, 1975)
synonyms = "Upupa antaois" (lapsus)The Giant Hoopoe ("Upupa antaios"), also known as St. Helena Giant Hoopoe or St. Helena Hoopoe, is an extinct species ofHoopoe (family Upupidae), known exclusively from an incompletesubfossil skeleton.It was endemic to the island of
Saint Helena in the South Atlantic. It is considered that it was much larger than its European and African relatives. In addition it was completely flightless. The incompleteskeleton which was found in 1975 by palaeontologistStorrs Olson consists of bothcoracoid s and the leftfemur . The reasons for its extinction remained unknown, though, it is assumed that it became extinct soon after, if not immediately after, St. Helena was discovered and colonized in 1502, due to the introduction of predators such asblack rat s, anddomestic cat s, as well as habitat destruction.As all known hoopoes are insectivores that feed primarily on large insects, the Giant Hoopoe may have been a predator of the
St. Helena earwig , ("Labidura herculeana"), an insect which has not been seen alive since 1967.References
*Storrs L. Olson, Paleornithology of St. Helena Island, south Atlantic Ocean, Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology 23 (1975)
External links
* Database entry includes justification for why this species is listed as extinct
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