Finsch's Duck

Finsch's Duck
Finsch's Duck
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Anseriformes
Family: Anatidae
Genus: Chenonetta
Species: C. finschi
Binomial name
Chenonetta finschi
(Oliver, 1930)
Synonyms

Euryanas finschi

Finsch's Duck (Chenonetta finschi) was a large terrestrial species of duck formerly endemic to New Zealand. The species was possibly once the most common duck in New Zealand, a supposition based on the frequency of its fossils in bone deposits. The species was originally considered to be in its own genus, Euryanas, but is now known to be closely related to the Maned Duck and recently derived from that species.[1]

The Finsch's Duck was much larger than the Maned Duck, probably weighing twice as much (around 1-2 kg) and having larger legs. The wings were much reduced however, and it seems that flight was lost relatively quickly after the species arrived in New Zealand. Little is known about the biology of the species, but its remains have been found widely in New Zealand and it does not seem to have been tied to water like many other duck species.

The species is thought to have become extinct due to human hunting and predation by introduced species, particularly rats. Like many large flightless New Zealand birds its remains have been found in Māori middens. Radiocarbon dating puts the youngest bones of the species as recently as the 15th -17th centuries, and one account of a large flightless goose killed in Opotiki suggests the species might have survived until 1870.

References

  1. ^ Worthy, Trevor H., Olson, Storrs L. (2002): Relationships, adaptations, and habits of the extinct duck 'Euryanas' finschi. Notornis 49(1): 1–17. PDF fulltext

Further reading

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Australian Wood Duck — Adult male Adult female …   Wikipedia

  • Pacific Black Duck — Conservation status Least Concern ( …   Wikipedia

  • Late Quaternary prehistoric birds — Prehistoric birds are various taxa of birds that became extinct before recorded history, or more precisely, before they could be studied alive by bird scientists. They are known from subfossil remains and sometimes folk memory, as in the case of… …   Wikipedia

  • List of extinct New Zealand animals — This is a list of extinct New Zealand animals. MammalsApart from bats, and a new discovery of a mouse like creature on Banks Peninsula, New Zealand had no land mammals until humans arrived, but there have been fossil marine mammals found. New… …   Wikipedia

  • List of extinct birds — This page refers only to birds that have gone extinct since the year 1500 A.D./C.E. and usually were subject to scientific study while alive.Since 1500, over 190 species of birds have become extinct, and this rate of extinction seems to be… …   Wikipedia

  • Quaternary extinction event — Late Pleistocene landscape of northern Eurasia The Quaternary period saw the extinctions of numerous predominantly larger, especially megafaunal, species, many of which occurred during the transition from the Pleistocene to the Holocene epoch.… …   Wikipedia

  • Porphyrio hochstetteri — Südinseltakahe Südinseltakahe (Porphyrio hochstetteri) Systematik Klasse: Vögel (Aves) Ordnung …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Südinseltakahe — (Porphyrio hochstetteri) Systematik Klasse: Vögel (Aves) Ordnung: Kra …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Adzebill — Taxobox name = Adzebills status = fossil regnum = Animalia phylum = Chordata classis = Aves ordo = Gruiformes (but see article) familia = Aptornithidae familia authority = Mantell, 1848 genus = Aptornis genus authority = Owen, 1844 subdivision… …   Wikipedia

  • List of African birds — This list of African birds is a listing of all the bird species known from the continent of Africa. TOCrightNotesThere are over 45 billion different species of birds in Africa.The taxonomy of this list adheres to James Clitorus Birds of the World …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”