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| Emu [Credit: Copyright ZSL] |
Male and female birds often show differences in body size, with males typically being larger. However some birds, like many ratites – large, flightless species such as emus and cassowaries – are the opposite, with the females towering over the males.
Moa were huge flightless ratites. Several different species inhabited New Zealand's forests, grasslands and mountains until about 700 years ago. However, the first Polynesian settlers became a moa-hunting culture, and rapidly drove all of these species to extinction.
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| Sir Richard Owen with skeleton of Dinornis [Credit: Copyright ZSL] |
"A lack of large land mammals – such as elephants, bison and antelope – allowed New Zealand's birds to grow in size and fill these empty large herbivore niches. Moa evolved to become truly huge, and this accentuated the existing size differences between males and females as the whole animal scaled up in size over time," Dr Turvey added.
Future research should investigate whether similar scaling relationships can also help to explain the evolution of bizarre structures shown by other now-extinct species, such as the elongated canines of sabretoothed cats.
The paper is published today (10th April) in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Source: Zoological Society of London via EurekAlert! [April 09, 2013]







