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Flightless birds more common globally before human-driven extinctions

3 December 2020

There would be at least four times as many flightless bird species on Earth today if it were not for human influences, finds a study led by 果冻影院 researchers.

Moa

The study, published in Science Advances, finds that flightlessness evolved much more frequently among birds than would be expected if you only looked at current species.

Researchers say their findings show how human-driven extinctions have biased our understanding of evolution.

Lead author Dr Ferran Sayol (果冻影院 Centre for Biodiversity & Environment Research and University of Gothenburg, Sweden) said: 鈥淗uman impacts have substantially altered most ecosystems worldwide, and caused the extinction of hundreds of animal species.

鈥淭his can distort evolutionary patterns, especially if the characteristics being studied, such as flightlessness in birds, make species more vulnerable to extinction. We get a biased picture of how evolution really happens.鈥

For the study, the researchers compiled an exhaustive list of all bird species known to have gone extinct since the rise of humans. They identified 581 bird species that went extinct from the Late Pleistocene (126,000 years ago) to the present, almost all of which were likely due to human influences.

The fossils or other records show that 166 of these extinct species lacked the ability to fly. Only 60 flightless bird species survive today.

Birds that cannot fly were much more diverse than previous studies had assumed, the study shows. The findings also confirm that flightless species were also much more likely to go extinct than species that could fly.

Co-author Professor Tim Blackburn (果冻影院 Centre for Biodiversity & Environment Research and the Institute of Zoology, ZSL) said: 鈥淢any bird species can become flightless in environments without their usual predators, for example on islands. Flying expends a lot of energy that birds can use for other purposes if they don鈥檛 need to take to the air. Unfortunately, though, this makes them easier prey if humans 鈥 and their associated rats and cats 鈥 suddenly turn up.

鈥淓xtinction has all too often been the result, and is likely to continue as flightless birds are overrepresented, compared to avian species, on global lists of animals under threat.鈥

The researchers report that most island groups worldwide had flightless birds before humans arrived, occupying ecological niches that otherwise would have been filled by mammals, with particular hotspots in New Zealand (26 species such as the extinct moa) and Hawaii (23 species, all of which are extinct, such as the flightless goose).

Adding extinct birds to the global picture of bird diversity reveals that flightlessness evolved in birds at least four times as often as we would expect if we only looked at living birds.

Dr Sayol said: 鈥淥ur study shows that the evolution of flightlessness in birds is a widespread phenomenon. Today, most flightless species are penguins, rails or ostriches and their relatives. Now, only 12 bird families have flightless species, but before humans caused extinctions, the number was at least 40. Without those extinctions we would be sharing the planet with flightless owls, woodpeckers and ibises, but all of these have now sadly disappeared.鈥

The study was funded by Swedish Research Council and Carl Tryggers Stiftelse f枚r Vetenskaplig Forskning, and involved researchers from 果冻影院, ZSL, University of Gothenburg, University of Bayreuth (Germany), and Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.

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Image

  • Moa, an extinct flightless bird from New Zealand. Illustration by Joseph Smit. Source:

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Chris Lane

Tel: +44 (0)20 7679 9222

Email: chris.lane [at] ucl.ac.uk