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Posted: Fri Aug 20, 2004 11:33 am
by jwa1107
Tuesday, August 17, 2004 Posted: 8:00 AM EDT (1200 GMT)

The bird's flightless nature and unexplored location make the find especially intriguing, scientists say.


JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (Reuters) -- Scientists have discovered a new species of flightless bird on a remote island in the Philippines, the conservation group BirdLife International has said.

The rare find is dramatic because flightless birds on small islands are especially vulnerable to extinction from human activities.

Many of the island species that have been categorized by science were long gone when biologists unearthed their bones.

BirdLife International said the proposed name for the bird is the Calayan rail with the scientific name Gallirallus calayanensis.

The bird, about the size of a crow, was found on the island of Calayan in the northern Philippines about 40 miles off the coast.

"The Calayan rail is a relative of the internationally familiar moorhen, with bright red beak and legs contrasting sharply with its dark plumage," BirdLife said in a statement.

"But unlike its familiar relative, the Calayan rail is flightless, or nearly so, and found only on the small island after which it is named."

One or two new bird species are uncovered each year but this rail's flightless nature and unexplored location make it especially intriguing.

"This is exceptional because it is flightless and no ornithologist had explored the island since 1903," Dr. Richard Thomas of BirdLife told Reuters by telephone from the group's British headquarters.

Genevieve Broad, a biologist and one of the co-leaders of the Filipino-British expedition, said isolation had protected the species from human encroachment.

"The island is 186 square kilometers (72 square miles) and has only 8,500 people who are concentrated in one town in the south. There are few people in the middle of the island (where the birds are found) because there aren't any roads," she told Reuters.

Isolation has also proved disastrous for flightless birds in the past. Many that evolved on remote islands with no predators have become what biologists term "ecologically naive" -- meaning they do not recognize danger from other animals.

So when humans first arrived on small islands in the past, they found the flightless birds to be easy sources of protein and often wiped them out. The dodo of the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius is the most famous example.

Most of the 22 species of rail that have become extinct since 1600 were flightless. Eighteen of the 20 living species of flightless rail are considered to be threatened.
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Copyright 2004 Reuters. All rights reserved.
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Posted: Fri Aug 20, 2004 1:51 pm
by Capt.Rutlinger
beautifull bird, and a cool thing that they discovered this new specie, let's hope it does not share the same destiny as the dodo.

Posted: Fri Aug 20, 2004 2:16 pm
by Raindragon
Wow, that's a lovely bird! ;) Congrats to the scientists who discovered it! :)

Posted: Fri Aug 20, 2004 4:11 pm
by phantom
That is one cool bird. A good example of why we need to become less destructive when it comes to the environment. Who knows what other undiscovered species are out there...

Posted: Fri Aug 20, 2004 4:30 pm
by ZTFan
That is pretty cool. I like animals alot. *gets the urge to edit this bird into zoo tycoon* :ph34r:

Posted: Sat Aug 21, 2004 2:30 pm
by professorpaul
BUT

It's not a ratite,it's a gruid.

If you want a new ratite they have seperated the Somali Ostrich as a new species!

Posted: Sun Aug 22, 2004 12:37 pm
by Wolfyu
Cool looking new bird they've got there. Excellent photo too. I hope more information can be discovered. They sound interesting. :)
~Wolfie

Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2004 10:47 am
by jwa1107
professorpaul wrote: BUT

It's not a ratite,it's a gruid.

If you want a new ratite they have seperated the Somali Ostrich as a new species!
my mistake; i thought all flightless birds were ratites...

thanks for the correction prof. paul :D

Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2004 9:45 pm
by Jay
A ratite is a flightless bird that has a flat breastbone instead of the keel that most flying birds have. Now, having said that, I doubt that I could point out a flat breastbone or a keel in a bird. :)) Any bird that is in the order of Gruiformes (cranes, rails, coots) are gruiforms.

Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2004 9:59 pm
by ZTFan
Uhhh... *Brain fuses for 20 minutes*

No actually, I like hearing stuff like that. I like animals. I think I am going to make one of those birds on Zoo Tycoon. Have they named it? I haven't heard much. Maybe I missed something... :ph34r:

Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2004 10:34 pm
by Jay
According to the above, the proposed name is "Calayan rail". It would not be official until an international organization meets and agrees. But I think they usually agree with the proposed names, even when they are wrong. (Scientifically, seals and sea lions are different. But, when fur traders have found new types, they use the name that they think will get people to buy the fur. These names are still used.) Now, as far as the scientific name, those usually involve tests before agreement occurs.

Posted: Wed Sep 08, 2004 2:00 pm
by firelupe
Thats an awsome bird, and its really pretty! It's not everyday that you find a new species of ANYTHING
Anyone care to try to make it into a ZT download *cough ZTFan cough*
Whoooooo, thats some nasty cough I've got there :lol:

Thanks for sharing with us Jwa!! It's really awsome!

:flammie: