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The Plotopteridae were a
family of flightless
seabirds from the order
Pelecaniformes. Related to the gannets and boobies, they
exhibited remarkable convergent evolution with the
penguins, particularly with the now
extinct giant penguins. That they lived in the
North Pacific, the other side of the world from the
penguins, has led to them being described at times as the
Northern Hemisphere's penguins, although one novel new
theory suggests that this group is a link between the
penguins and the Pelecaniformes. Their fossils have been
found in California, Washington and Japan. They ranged in
size from that of a large cormorant (such as a Brandt's
Cormorant), to being 2 m long. They had shortened wings
designed for underwater wing-propelled pursuit diving (like
penguins or the now extinct Great Auk), a body skeleton
similar to that of the darter and the skull similar to that of a
sulid.
The earliest known Plotopteridae species, Phocavis
maritimus lived in the mid-Eocene, but most of the known
species lived in the early and mid-Miocene, after which it
appears they went extinct. That they went extinct at the
same time as the giant penguins of the Southern Hemisphere,
which also coincided with the radiation of the seals and
dolphins, has led to speculation that the expansion of
marine mammals was responsible for the extinction of the
Plotopteridae.
References
Howard, H. (1969): A new avian fossil from Kern
County, California.
Condor71: 68–69.
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Olson, Storrs L.; Hasegawa, Yoshikazu (1979): Fossil
Counterparts of Giant Penguins from the North Pacific.
Science206(4419): 688-689.
HTML abstract
Olson, Storrs L. & Hasegawa, Yoshikazu (1996): A new
genus and two new species of gigantic Plotopteridae from
Japan (Aves: Pelecaniformes).
J. Vert. Paleontol.16(4): 742-751.
Schreiber, E.A. & Burger, J. (2001): Biology of
Marine Birds,
ISBN 0-8493-9882-7
Mayr, Gerald (2004): Tertiary plotopterids (Aves,
Plotopteridae) and a novel hypothesis on the
phylogenetic relationships of penguins (Spheniscidae).
Journal of Zoological Systematics43(1):
67-71.
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