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An extinct nestorid parrot (Aves,Psittaciformes, Nestoridae) from the Chatham Islands,New Zealand
Authors:Jamie R. Wood  Kieren J. Mitchell  R. Paul Scofield  Alan. J. D. Tennyson  Andrew E. Fidler  Janet M. Wilmshurst  Bastien Llamas  Alan Cooper
Affiliation:1. Landcare Research, , Lincoln, 7640 New Zealand;2. Australian Centre for Ancient DNA, School of Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, , Adelaide, SA, 5005 Australia;3. Canterbury Museum, , Christchurch, 8001 New Zealand;4. Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, , Wellington, New Zealand;5. Institute of Marine Science, University of Auckland, , Warkworth, 0941 New Zealand
Abstract:We describe an extinct parrot from late Quaternary fossil bone deposits on the Chatham Islands, located c. 800 km east of mainland New Zealand. Mitochondrial DNA analyses and osteological characters confirm that the Chatham Islands parrot was a sister taxon to the New Zealand kaka (Nestor meridionalis Gmelin, 1788). The relatively large femur : humerus length ratio and broad pelvis of the Chatham Islands parrot indicate that it had a more terrestrial habit than the kaka. Stable dietary isotope analyses (δ 15N and δ 13C) of Chatham Islands parrot bones suggest that the species may have been mainly herbivorous, although further analyses are required to confirm this. The presence of Chatham Islands parrot bones in early midden deposits shows that the species persisted into the post‐settlement era, and became extinct possibly as a result of habitat loss, hunting pressure, and rat predation following initial Polynesian settlement of the islands (sometime between the 13th and 16th centuries AD). © 2014 The Linnean Society of London
Keywords:ancient DNA  avian palaeontology  isotopes  kaka  kea  morphometrics  phylogenetics.
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