Tongoenas burleyi, Steadman & Takano, 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4810.3.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:20937C0A-C315-4446-AD81-994E1D39D553 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F12D5EF3-6E9E-43DE-9FCB-8A22F0360265 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:F12D5EF3-6E9E-43DE-9FCB-8A22F0360265 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2020-07-14 09:24:08, last updated 2020-07-14 09:24:09) |
scientific name |
Tongoenas burleyi |
status |
new genus and species |
Tongoenas burleyi new genus and species
Holotype. UF 159857 View Materials , tarsometatarsus ( Figs. 3, 4; Table 2), Ha`ateiho site, Tongatapu, Tonga. Collected by D. V. Burley, D. W. Steadman, A. Barton, J. I. Mead, and S. Swift on 6 August 1999.
Paratypes. All from the Ha`ateiho site, Tongatapu, Tonga: femora UF 159536 View Materials , 159772 ; tibiotarsi UF 159853 View Materials ( Fig. 5, Table 2) , UF 159854 View Materials –159856 ; tarsometatarsus, hallux, and pedal phalanges UF 159858 View Materials –159883 , associated with the holotype UF 159857 View Materials ; tarsometatarsi UF 159469 View Materials ( Figs. 3, 4, Table 2) , UF 159648 View Materials , 159659 , 159660 ( Figs. 3, 4, Table 2) , UF 160604 View Materials ; pedal phalanx UF 159783 View Materials . Casts of the type series will be made for distribution to other institutions, including the Archaeological Collections of Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, B.C., where much of the Tongan zooarchaeological material resides .
Referred Material. Faleloa site, Foa : radius UF 156956 View Materials , 156961 ; tarsometatarsi UF 156810 View Materials , 156835 ( Figs. 3, 4) , UF 156857 View Materials ( Figs. 3, 4) ; pedal phalanges UF 156833 View Materials , 156967 . Tongoleleka site, Lifuka : sternum UF 158510 View Materials ; coracoid UF 158509 View Materials ( Figs. 6, 7) ; scapulae UF 158681 View Materials ( Fig. 8) , UF 158735 View Materials ( Fig. 8) ; humerus UF 158475 View Materials ; radii UF 158738 View Materials , 158446 / 158488/158511 (fit together); carpometacarpi UF 158291 View Materials , 158301 ; associated synsacrum and vertebrae UF 158485 View Materials , 158486 , 158488 , 158490 , 158491 , 158495 , 158499 , 158501 , 158502 ; femur UF 158267 View Materials ; tibiotarsi UF 158265 View Materials ( Fig. 5) , BPBM 165685 About BPBM ( Fig. 5) ; tarsometatarsi UF 158062 View Materials , 158199 ; hallux UF 158427 View Materials . Vaipuna site,` Uiha : scapula UF 159162 View Materials ; tarsometatarsus UF 159094 View Materials ; pedal phalanges UF 159097 View Materials , 159128 , 159234 . Mele Havea site, Ha`afeva: sternum UF 156113 View Materials ; radii UF 156398 View Materials , 156461 .` Anatu ,`Eua: coracoid UF 150604 View Materials ( Figs. 6, 7) ; ulna UF 152569 View Materials ; radius UF 152969 View Materials ; ulnare UF 151728 View Materials ; manus phalanges UF 152686 View Materials , 152967 ; pedal phalanges UF 152203 View Materials , 152446 . Collapse Cave ,`Eua: pedal phalanx UF 150709 View Materials .
Diagnosis. Tongoenas belongs to the arboreal pigeon group (which also includes Hemiphaga , Ducula , Ptilinopus , Drepanoptila , Gymnophaps ; see above) because of sharing characters 7, 9–11 of the tibiotarsus and 17–19, 21 of the tarsometatarsus (Table 1). These eight characters collectively exclude Tongoenas from any of the intermedi- ate or terrestrial pigeons. Within the arboreal pigeon group, Tongoenas differs from the other genera, especially the sympatric Ducula and Ptilinopus , in these unique hindlimb characters. Tarsometatarsus ( Figs. 3, 4): distal extent of crista plantaris mediana rounded and joins corpus tarsometatarsi more gradually; corpus tarsometatarsi stouter relative to corpus femoris and corpus tibiotarsi; fossa metatarsi I more distal; in dorsal aspect, foramen vasculare distale wider but less elongate; in dorsal or ventral aspect, the distal end flares more from corpus tarsometatarsi in both medial and lateral directions; trochlea metatarsi tertii longer. Tibiotarsus ( Fig. 5): lateral margin of crista fibularis parallel (not oblique) to long axis of corpus tibiotarsi; canalis extensorius larger, deeper; lateral scar for retinaculum extensorium tibiotarsi located more proximal to condylus lateralis, and even proximal to proximal opening of canalis extensorius. Three elements of the pectoral girdle and wing of Tongoenas also distinguish it from other genera in the arboreal group, again, especially Ducula and Ptilinopus , as follows. Coracoid ( Figs. 6, 7): facies articularis sternalis proportionately deeper, especially in medial half; facies articularis humeralis larger, with deeper depression between it and corpus coracoideus. Scapula ( Fig. 8): less medio-lateral expansion (relative to shaft) of facies articularis clavicularis; facies articularis humeralis more protrudent from corpus scapulae. Radius (not depicted): sulcus ligamentum more convex.
Among volant columbids, living or extinct, Tongoenas burleyi is exceeded in size only by the species of Goura (Table 2).
Etymology. The name Tongoenas derives from combining Tonga (a Polynesian name for the island group where the pigeon once lived) with the Greek word oenas (feminine; a wild pigeon; Brown 1956:278). The species name burleyi is to honor archaeologist David V. Burley, whose many excavations of prehistoric sites in Tonga, including most of the sites that have produced specimens of Tongoenas , have yielded abundant materials of great cultural and biological importance.
Geological Age. Holocene and late Pleistocene. All specimens from Tongatapu and the Ha`apai Group are culturally associated and probably date from ~2850 to ~2700 cal BP (calibrated calendar years before present). Ton- goenas burleyi became extinct after people colonized Tonga about 2850 cal BP, probably within a century or two of human arrival, like so many other Tongan species ( Steadman et al. 2002b). It is unknown from historic (18 th or 19 th century) specimens or observations. On` Eua, the specimen of T. burleyi from Collapse Cave dates to ≤2850 cal BP by being associated with bones of introduced Rattus exulans . The specimens of T. burleyi from`Anatu are older ( Steadman 1993): those from Layer II (five specimens) are>2850 cal BP but <60,000 –80,000 years old; those from Layer III (two specimens) are> 60,000 –80,000 years old; and one other specimen is from mixed strata II/III.
Brown, R. W. (1956) Composition of Scientific Words. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., 882 pp.
Steadman, D. W. (1993) Biogeography of Tongan birds before and after human impact. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science USA, 90 (3), 818 - 822. https: // doi. org / 10.1073 / pnas. 90.3.818
Steadman, D. W., Pregill, G. K. & Burley, D. V. (2002 b) Rapid prehistoric extinction of iguanas and birds in Polynesia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 99 (6), 3673 - 3677. https: // doi. org / 10.1073 / pnas. 072079299
UF |
Florida Museum of Natural History- Zoology, Paleontology and Paleobotany |
V |
Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
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