Information about Ratites
| Ratites | ||||||||||
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Various ratite birds | ||||||||||
| Scientific classification | ||||||||||
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| Families | ||||||||||
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Struthionidae (ostriches) Rheidae (rheas) Casuariidae (emus etc.) †Aepyornithidae (elephant birds) †Dinornithidae (moa) Apterygidae (kiwis) | ||||||||||
A ratite is any of a diverse group of large, flightless birds of Gondwanan origin, most of them now extinct. Unlike other flightless birds, the ratites have no keel on their sternum and, lacking a strong anchor for their wing muscles, could not fly even were they to develop suitable wings. The name ratite comes from the Latin word for raft (ratis), because their breastbone looks like a raft.
Most parts of the former Gondwana have ratites, or have had until the fairly recent past.
Living forms
The African Ostrich is the largest living ratite. A large member of this species can be nearly 3 meters (9.9 feet) tall, weigh as much as 159 kg (350 lbs), and can outrun a horse.Of the living species, the Australian emu is next in size, reaching up to 2 m (6.6 feet) tall and about 60 kg (132 lbs). Like the ostrich, it is a fast-running, powerful bird of the open plains and woodlands.
Also native to Australia and the islands to the north are the three species of cassowary. Shorter than an emu and very solidly built, cassowaries prefer thickly vegetated tropical forest. They can be very dangerous when surprised or cornered. In New Guinea, cassowary eggs are brought back to villages and the chicks raised for eating as a much-prized delicacy, despite (or perhaps because of) the risk they pose to life and limb.
South America has two species of rhea, mid-sized, fast-running birds of the Pampas. The larger American rhea grows to about 1.5 meters(5 feet) tall and usually weighs 20 to 25 kg (44 to 55 lbs). (South America also has 73 species of the small and ground-dwelling but not flightless tinamou family, which is distantly related to the ratite group.)
The smallest ratites are the five species of kiwi from New Zealand. Kiwi are chicken-sized, shy, and nocturnal. They nest in deep burrows and use a highly developed sense of smell to find small insects and grubs in the soil. Kiwi are notable for laying eggs that are very large in relation to their body size. A Kiwi egg may equal 15 to 20 percent of the body mass of a female kiwi. The smallest species of kiwi is the Little Spotted Kiwi, at 1.2 kg (2.7 lbs) and 40 cm (16 inches).
Extinct forms
Aepyornis, the "elephant bird" of Madagascar, was the largest bird ever known. Although shorter than the tallest moa, a large Aepyornis could weigh over 450 kg (1,000 lbs) and stand up to 3 meters (10 feet) tall.Moa - at least ten species in New Zealand, ranging from just over turkey-sized, to the Giant Moa Dinornis robustus (formerly known as Dinornis giganteus) with a height of 3.3 meters (11 feet) and weighing about 250 kg (550 lbs)[1]. Extinct by 1500 due to hunting by human settlers, who arrived around 1000, although at least one species may have survived past this date and maybe was seen by early European settlers.
In addition, eggshell fragments similar to those of Aepyornis (though this is probably a symplesiomorphy) were found on the Canary Islands. The fragments apparently date to the Middle or Late Miocene, and no satisfying theory has been proposed as to how they got there due to uncertainties about whether these islands were ever connected to the mainland.
Evolution and systematics
There are two taxonomic approaches to ratite classification: the one applied here combines the groups as families in the order Struthioniformes, while the other supposes that the lineages evolved mostly independently and thus elevates the families to order rank (e.g. Rheiformes, Casuariformes etc.).The traditional account of ratite evolution has the group emerging in Gondwana in the Cretaceous, then evolving in their separate directions as the continents drifted apart. Cladistic analysis of morphology strongly supports this: ratites share too many features for their current forms to be parsimoniously explained by convergent evolution. However, recent analysis of genetic variation between the ratites conflicts with this: DNA analysis appears to show that the ratites diverged from one another too recently to share a common Gondwanian ancestor, and suggests that the kiwi are more closely related to the cassowaries than the moa. At present there is no generally accepted explanation. Also, there is the Middle Eocene fossil "proto-ostrich" Palaeotis from Central Europe, which either implies that the ancestral ratites had not yet lost flight when they were dispersing all over Gondwana - by the Middle Eocene, both Laurasia and Gondwana had separated into the continents of today - or that the "out-of-Gondwana" hypothesis is wrong. Research continues, but at present the ratites are perhaps the one group of modern birds for which no robust theory of their evolution and paleobiogeography exists. Current opinion is tentatively supporting a splitting of the group, with the Struthioniformes sensu stricto being one of the last ratite lineages to emerge.
Birds | |
|---|---|
| Anatomy | Skeleton - Flight - Eggs - Feathers - Plumage |
| Evolution | Archaeopteryx - Enantiornithes - Hybridisation - Late Quaternary prehistoric birds - Fossils - Taxonomy - Extinction |
| Behaviour | Singing - Intelligence - Migration - Reproduction - Incubation - Brood parasites |
| Bird Orders | Struthioniformes - Tinamiformes - Anseriformes - Galliformes - Gaviiformes - Podicipediformes - Procellariiformes - Sphenisciformes - Pelecaniformes - Ciconiiformes - Phoenicopteriformes - Falconiformes - Gruiformes - Charadriiformes - Pteroclidiformes - Columbiformes - Psittaciformes - Cuculiformes - Strigiformes - Caprimulgiformes - Apodiformes - Coraciiformes - Piciformes - Trogoniformes - Coliiformes - Passeriformes |
| Bird lists | Familes and orders - Lists by region |
| Birds and humans | Ringing - Ornithology - Bird collections - Birdwatching - Bird feeding - Conservation - Aviculture |
Scientific classification or biological classification is a method by which biologists group and categorize species of organisms. Scientific classification also can be called scientific taxonomy, but should be distinguished from folk taxonomy, which lacks scientific basis.
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Chordata
Bateson, 1885
Typical Classes
See below
Chordates (phylum Chordata) are a group of animals that includes the vertebrates, together with several closely related invertebrates.
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Bateson, 1885
Typical Classes
See below
Chordates (phylum Chordata) are a group of animals that includes the vertebrates, together with several closely related invertebrates.
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Aves
Linnaeus, 1758
Orders
About two dozen - see section below
Birds (class Aves) are bipedal, warm-blooded, egg-laying vertebrate animals.
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Linnaeus, 1758
Orders
About two dozen - see section below
Birds (class Aves) are bipedal, warm-blooded, egg-laying vertebrate animals.
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Paleognathae
Pycraft, 1900
Orders
Primary Classification
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Pycraft, 1900
Orders
Primary Classification
- Lithornithiformes
- Dinornithiformes
- Aepyornithiformes
- Struthioniformes
- Rheiformes
- Casuariiformes
- Apterygiformes
- Tinamiformes
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John Latham (June 27, 1740 - February 4, 1837) was an English physician, naturalist and author.
Latham has been called the "grandfather" of Australian ornithology. He was able to examine specimens of Australian birds which reached England in the last twenty years of the 18th
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Latham has been called the "grandfather" of Australian ornithology. He was able to examine specimens of Australian birds which reached England in the last twenty years of the 18th
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Struthionidae
Vigors, 1825
Genus: Struthio
Linnaeus, 1758
Species: S.
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Vigors, 1825
Genus: Struthio
Linnaeus, 1758
Species: S.
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Rheidae
Bonaparte, 1849
Genus: Rhea
Brisson, 1760
Species
Rheas, also known as ñandú
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Bonaparte, 1849
Genus: Rhea
Brisson, 1760
Species
- R. americana
- R. pennata
Rheas, also known as ñandú
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Casuariidae
Kaup, 1847
Genera
Casuarius
Dromaius
For fossil forms, see article
The bird family Casuariidae has four surviving members: the three species of cassowary, and the only remaining species of Emu.
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Kaup, 1847
Genera
Casuarius
Dromaius
For fossil forms, see article
The bird family Casuariidae has four surviving members: the three species of cassowary, and the only remaining species of Emu.
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Aepyornithidae
Genera
Aepyornis
Mullerornis
Elephant birds are an extinct family of flightless birds comprising the genera Aepyornis and Mullerornis.
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Genera
Aepyornis
Mullerornis
Elephant birds are an extinct family of flightless birds comprising the genera Aepyornis and Mullerornis.
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MOA is a three-letter abbreviation with multiple meanings, as described below:
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- Magnetic Field Oscillating Amplified Thruster, a novel propulsion system with several terrestrial applications
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KIWI
City of license McFarland, California
Broadcast area Bakersfield, California
Branding KRAB Radio
Slogan La Que Toca Puras Buenas!
First air date 1989
Frequency 102.
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City of license McFarland, California
Broadcast area Bakersfield, California
Branding KRAB Radio
Slogan La Que Toca Puras Buenas!
First air date 1989
Frequency 102.
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Flightless birds are birds which lack the ability to fly, relying instead on their ability to run or swim, and are thought to have evolved from their flying ancestors.[1] There are about forty species in existence today,[2]
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Gondwana (IPA: /ɡɒnˈdwɑːnə/[1], originally Gondwanaland) included most of the landmasses in today's southern hemisphere, including Antarctica, South America, Africa, Madagascar,
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keel in bird anatomy is an extension of the sternum which runs axially along the midline of the sternum and extends outward, perpendicular to the plane of the ribs. The keel provides an anchor to which a bird's wing muscles attach, thereby providing adequate leverage for flight.
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sternum (from Greek στέρνον, sternon, "chest" and hebrew pronounced "Shamokin" also meaning chest) or breastbone is a long, flat bone located in the center of the thorax (chest).
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Gondwana (IPA: /ɡɒnˈdwɑːnə/[1], originally Gondwanaland) included most of the landmasses in today's southern hemisphere, including Antarctica, South America, Africa, Madagascar,
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Struthionidae
Vigors, 1825
Genus: Struthio
Linnaeus, 1758
Species: S.
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Vigors, 1825
Genus: Struthio
Linnaeus, 1758
Species: S.
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Emu may refer to:
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- Emu, a large, flightless bird
- Emu (journal) (Emu - Austral Ornithology), a scientific journal
- Emu Field (alternatively known as Emu or Emu Junction), the location of the first atomic test that occurred on the Australian mainland in 1953
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Casuarius
Brisson, 1760
Species
Casuarius casuarius
Casuarius unappendiculatus
Casuarius bennetti
Cassowaries (genus Casuarius
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Brisson, 1760
Species
Casuarius casuarius
Casuarius unappendiculatus
Casuarius bennetti
Cassowaries (genus Casuarius
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New Guinea<nowiki />
Political division of New Guinea
Geography
<nowiki/>
Location Island north of Australian continent
Coordinates
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Political division of New Guinea
Geography
<nowiki/>
Location Island north of Australian continent
Coordinates
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South America is a continent of the Americas, situated entirely in the Western Hemisphere and mostly in the Southern Hemisphere. It is bordered on the west by the Pacific Ocean and on the north and east by the Atlantic Ocean; North America and the Caribbean Sea lie
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Rheidae
Bonaparte, 1849
Genus: Rhea
Brisson, 1760
Species
Rheas, also known as ñandú
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Bonaparte, 1849
Genus: Rhea
Brisson, 1760
Species
- R. americana
- R. pennata
Rheas, also known as ñandú
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Pampas (from Quechua, meaning "plain") are the fertile South American lowlands that include the Argentine provinces of Buenos Aires, La Pampa, Santa Fe, and Córdoba, most of Uruguay, and the southernmost end of Brazil, Rio Grande do Sul, covering more than 750,000 km² (290,000
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R. americana
Binomial name
Rhea americana
(Linnaeus, 1758)
The American Rhea (Rhea americana), also known as the Gray, Common
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Binomial name
Rhea americana
(Linnaeus, 1758)
The American Rhea (Rhea americana), also known as the Gray, Common
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Tinamiformes
Huxley, 1872
Family: Tinamidae
G.R. Gray, 1840
Genera
Tinamus
Nothocercus
Crypturellus
Rhynchotus
Nothoprocta
Nothura
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Huxley, 1872
Family: Tinamidae
G.R. Gray, 1840
Genera
Tinamus
Nothocercus
Crypturellus
Rhynchotus
Nothoprocta
Nothura
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KIWI
City of license McFarland, California
Broadcast area Bakersfield, California
Branding KRAB Radio
Slogan La Que Toca Puras Buenas!
First air date 1989
Frequency 102.
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City of license McFarland, California
Broadcast area Bakersfield, California
Branding KRAB Radio
Slogan La Que Toca Puras Buenas!
First air date 1989
Frequency 102.
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chicken (Gallus gallus) is a type of domesticated fowl, believed to be descended from the wild Indian and south-east Asian Red Junglefowl.
The chicken is one of the most common and wide-spread domestic animals.
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The chicken is one of the most common and wide-spread domestic animals.
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A. owenii
Binomial name
Apteryx owenii
Gould, 1847
The Little Spotted Kiwi (Apteryx owenii
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Binomial name
Apteryx owenii
Gould, 1847
The Little Spotted Kiwi (Apteryx owenii
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Aepyornithidae
Genera
Aepyornis
Mullerornis
Elephant birds are an extinct family of flightless birds comprising the genera Aepyornis and Mullerornis.
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Genera
Aepyornis
Mullerornis
Elephant birds are an extinct family of flightless birds comprising the genera Aepyornis and Mullerornis.
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