Ducula shutleri Worthy and Burley, 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/22588786-FFEC-6A1D-FF22-FE560255FDE5 |
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Plazi (2020-07-14 09:24:08, last updated 2020-07-14 09:24:09) |
scientific name |
Ducula shutleri Worthy and Burley, 2020 |
status |
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Ducula shutleri Worthy and Burley, 2020
Referred Material. Ha`ateiho site, Tongatapu: tarsometatarsus UF 152051 View Materials ( Figs. 3, 4) . Mele Havea site, Ha`afeva: coracoid UF 156618 View Materials ( Figs. 6, 7) ; scapula UF 156457 View Materials ( Fig. 8) ; tibiotarsus UF 156405 View Materials ; tarsometatarsus UF 156286 View Materials ; ungual phalanges UF 156392 View Materials , 157980 . Tongoleleka site, Lifuka : coracoids UF 158531 View Materials , BPBM 165692 About BPBM ( Figs. 6, 7) ; tarsometatarsus UF 158292 View Materials .` Anatu ,`Eua: nasal UF 152063 View Materials ; scapula UF 151864 View Materials ; ulnae UF 152745 View Materials , 152958 , 152968 ; tarsometatarsus UF 151882 View Materials ; ungual phalanx UF 152000 View Materials .
Remarks. Ducula shutleri , recently described from archaeological sites in the Vava`u group of Tonga ( Worthy & Burley 2020), belongs to the arboreal pigeon group (which also includes Hemiphaga , Ptilinopus , Drepanoptila , Gymnophaps , Tongoenas , and other species of Ducula ; see below) because of agreeing with them in characters 5–7 of the tibiotarsus, and characters 14–18 of the tarsometatarsus (Table 1). These eight characters collectively exclude D. shutleri from any of the intermediate or terrestrial pigeons. The material agrees in the characters of all five skeletal elements with modern species of Ducula . We refer the 16 specimens (6 skeletal elements) to D. shutleri based on agreement with characters stated in Worthy and Burley (2020), who pointed out that D. shutleri was larger than any congeneric species, living or extinct (Table 2). Ducula shutleri was listed as “ Ducula undescribed sp.” in Steadman (2006a:327, 328, 335).
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. As with Tongoenas burleyi , Ducula shutleri became extinct after people colonized Tonga about 2850 cal BP; it is not known from historic (18 th or 19 th century) specimens or observations, and probably died out within a century or two of human arrival. On` Eua, the specimens of D. shutleri from`Anatu are much older: 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.
Steadman, D. W. (2006 a) Extinction and biogeography of tropical Pacific birds. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, xiv + 594 pp.
Worthy, T. H. & Burley, D. V. (2020) Prehistoric avifaunas from the Kingdom of Tonga. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 189 (3), 998 - 1045. https: // doi. org / 10.1093 / zoolinnean / zlz 110
UF |
Florida Museum of Natural History- Zoology, Paleontology and Paleobotany |
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