Sylviornis
Conservation status: Prehistoric |
|
Scientific classification |
Kingdom: |
Animalia
|
Phylum: |
Chordata
|
Class: |
Aves
|
Order: |
Galliformes
|
Family: |
Sylviornithidae
Mourer-Chauviré & Balouet,
2005 |
Genus: |
Sylviornis
Poplin,
1980 |
Species: |
S. neocaledoniae
|
|
Binomial name |
Sylviornis neocaledoniae
Poplin,
1980 |
Sylviornis is an
extinct genus of
galliform bird containing a single species, S.
neocaledoniae, the Sylviornis or New
Caledonian Giant Megapode. Technically, however, it has
recently been found not to be a
megapode, but the sole known member of its own
family, the Sylviornithidae; at the time of its
description, it was believed to be a
ratite. The Sylviornis was never encountered alive by
scientists, but it is known from many thousands of subfossil
bones found in deposits, some of them from the Holocene, on
New Caledonia and the adjacent Île des Pins.
The Sylviornis was a huge, flightless bird, 1.70 meters
long altogether, and weighing around 30 kg. It had a large
skull with a high and laterally compressed beak surmounted
by a bony knob. Its legs were rather short, but had strong
toes with long nails. The skeleton has a number of
peculiarities and differences that make the Sylviornis stand
apart from all other known birds: the clavicles were not
fused to a furcula, the number of caudal vertebrae was very
high, and the ribcage and pelvis were almost dinosaurian in appearance. The wings were reduced to
small stubs.
A large proportion - up to 50% in some deposits - of the
remains found were from juvenile animals. Thus, it has been
theorized that the Sylviornis had a clutch of at least two,
more probably closer to 10 eggs, and that the average
lifespan was not much more than 5-7 years, which would be
extremely low for such a large bird. Apparently, the bird
did not incubate its eggs but built a mound similar to the
megapodes. Tumuli on the Île des Pins which were initially
believed to be graves were found to contain no human remains
or grave goods, and it has been hypothesized that they were
in reality the incubation mounts of Sylviornis. As these
mounds are up to 5 m high and 50 m wide even after nearly 4
millennia, they seem too large to have been made by the
Giant Scrubfowl, an extinct New Caledonian species of megapode.
Little can be said about the Sylviornis' lifestyle. It
was probably a slow-moving browser, and the structure of the
bill and feet suggest that roots and tubers it dug up formed
a major part of its diet.
Extinction
The bird was hunted to extinction by the
Lapita ancestors of the Kanak people, who settled New
Caledonia around 1500 BC. Predation by feral dogs and pigs
probably also played a part. The legacy of the Sylviornis
persists in Kanak oral history in the form of stories giving a rough
description of the bird and some of its habits. A native
name was du.
References
- Mourer-Chauviré, Cécile & Balouet, J. C. (2005):
Description of the skull of the genus Sylviornis
Poplin, 1980 (Aves, Galliformes, Sylviornithidae new
family), a giant extinct bird from the Holocene of New
Caledonia. In: Alcover, J. A. & Bover, P. (eds.):
Proceedings of the International Symposium "Insular
Vertebrate Evolution: the Palaeontological Approach".
Monografies de la Societat d’Història Natural de les
Balears 12: 205-118.
- Poplin, François (1980): Sylviornis neocaledoniae
n. g., n. sp. (Aves), ratite éteint de la Nouvelle-Calédonie.
Comptes Rendus de l'Academie des Sciences Paris sér.
D 290: 691-694 [Article in French]