Dodo

Since 1600, over 100 species of birds have become extinct, and this rate of extinction seems to be increasing. The situation is exemplified by Hawaii, where 30% of all now-extinct species originally lived. Other areas, such as Guam, have also been hard hit; Guam has lost over 60% of its native species in the last 30 years, many of them to imported snakes.

There are today about 10,000 species of birds, and 1186 of them are considered to be under threat of extinction. Except for 11 species, the threat is man-made.

Island species in general, and flightless island species in particular are most at risk. The disproportionate number of rails in the list reflects the tendency of that family to lose the ability to fly when geographically isolated.

Table of contents
1 Extinct species
2 External links and references

Extinct species

Ratites

  • Aepyornis, Aepyornis maximus
  • Moa, Dinornithiformes. Large flightless birds on New Zealand, they were probably already extinct in 1642 when Europeans landed there. The extinction of the moa and its main predator, the Harpagornis, is attributed to the arrival of human settlers around 1000 A.D. Very early European arrivals, ca 1830-40, described seeing birds that might have been the last of the moa but the sightings have never been confirmed reliably. New Zealand has no significant indigenous mammal life. The entire animal ecology consisted of birds, with the moa filling the niche of deer or cattle, and the harpagornis filling the niche of the wolf or tiger. There were eleven species, among them were Slender Moa, Dinornis torosus, and Great Broad-billed Moa, Euryyapteryx gravis .
  • Lesser Megalapteryx, Megalapteryx didinus
  • King Island Emu, Dromaius ater (Australia 1850)
  • Kangaroo Island Emu, Dromaius baudinianus (Australia 1827)

Grebes

Seabirds

Herons and related birds

Ducks, geese and swans

  • New Zealand Cape Barren Goose, Cereopsis novaezeelandiae
  • Korean Crested Shelduck, Tadorna cristata. Officially critically endangered due to recent unconfirmed reports. Last confirmed record in 1964.
  • Réunion Shelduck, Alopochen kervazoi (Mascarenes 1674)
  • Mauritian Shelduck, Alopochen mauritianus (Mascarenes 1698)
  • Amsterdam Island Duck, Anas marecula (Amsterdam Island 1800)
  • Mauritian Duck, Anas theodori (Mascarenes 1710)
  • Labrador Duck, Camptorhynchus labradorius. This eider-like sea duck was never very common. Although it has been hunted for food, it probably died out because of decline of mussels and shellfish due to pollution. The last one was seen at Elmira, New York, in 1878.
  • Auckland Islands Merganser, Mergus australis (Auckland Islands 1902)
  • Pink-headed Duck, Rhodonessa caryophyllacea. Officially critically endangered due to parts of its former range not yet being surveyed, but probably extinct.

Bird of prey

  • Guadalupe Caracara, Polyborus lutosus
  • Haast's Eagle, Harpagornis moorei. Giant eagle (up to 2.6m wingspan) endemic to New Zealand. Extinct approximately 1400 A.D. due to habitat loss and the extinction of its large flightless bird prey following human occupation.

Quails and relatives

Rails

  • Chatham Islands Rail, Rallus modestus
  • Wake Island Rail, Rallus wakensis
  • Tahitian Red-billed Rail, Rallus pacificus
  • Ascension Island Rail, Atlantisia elpenor
  • Kusaie Island Crake, Porzana monasa
  • Hawaiian Rail, Porzana sandwichensis
  • Laysan Rail, Porzana palmeri
  • Samoan Wood Rail, Gallinula pacifica
  • Lord Howe Swamphen, Porphyrio albus
  • Mauritius Red Hen, Aphanapteryx bonasia
  • Leguat's Gelinote, Aphanapteryx leguatz

Gulls, waders and auks

  • Great Auk, Alca impennis or Pinguinus impennis. At 75 centimeters, the flightless Great Auk was the largest of the auks. It was hunted to extinction for food and down for mattresses. The last pair were killed July 3, 1844.
  • Eskimo Curlew, Numenius borealis
  • Javanese Lapwing, Vanellus macropterus
  • White-winged Sandpiper, Prosobonia leucoptera

Pigeons and Dodos

  • Liverpool Pigeon, Caloenas maculata. Also known as the Spotted Green Pigeon, the only specimen has been in Liverpool Museum since 1851, and was probably collected on a Pacific island for Edward Stanley, 13th Earl of Derby.
  • Rodrigues Pigeon, Columba rodericana
  • Bonin Wood Pigeon, Columba versicolor
  • Mauritius Blue Pigeon, Alectroenas nitidissima Extinct in 19th century.
  • Forster's Dove of Tanna, Gallicolumba ferruginea
  • Marquesas Fruit Pigeon, Ptilinopus mercerii
  • Cholseul Crested Pigeon, Microgoura meeki
  • Passenger Pigeon, Ectopistes migratorius. The passenger pigeon was once probably the most common bird in the world. It was hunted close to extinction for food and sport in the late 19th century. The last one died in the Cincinnati Zoo in 1914.
  • Dodo, Raphus cucullatus, called Didus ineptus by Linnaeus. A meter-high (yard-high) flightless bird on Mauritius. Its forest habitat was lost when Dutch settlers moved to the island and the dodo's nests were destroyed by the rats, pigs, and cats the Dutch brought with them. The last specimen was killed in 1681, only 80 years after the arrival of the new predators. See dodo tree for a dodo-dependent plant species threatened with extinction after another 300 years. Of the 45 bird species originally found on Mauritius, only 21 have escaped extinction.
  • Rodrigues Solitaire, Pezophaps solitaria. Last seen c.1730.

Parrots

  • Paradise Parrot, Psephotus pulcherrimus
  • Society Parakeet, Cyanoramphus ulietanus
  • Black-fronted Parakeet, Cyanoramphus zealandicus
  • Newton's Parakeet, Psittacula exsul
  • Mascarene Parrot, Mascarinus mascarinus
  • Broad-billed Parrot, Lophopsitiacus mauritianus
  • Rodrigues Parrot, Necropsittacus rodericanus
  • Cuban Red Macaw, Ara tricolor
  • Glaucous Macaw, Anodorhynchus glaucus
  • Carolina Parakeet, Conuropsis carolinensis. The only parrot native to the eastern US, the Carolina Parakeet was hunted to extinction for its plumage and to prevent damage to crops; it also suffered from destruction of its habitat. The last one died in the Cincinnati Zoo in 1918.

Cuckoos, owls, nightjars and hummingbirds

  • Delalande's Coucal, Coua delalandei (Madagascar)
  • St Helena Cuckoo, Nannococcyx psix
  • Reunion Owl, Mascarenotus grucheti
  • Mauritius Owl, Mascarenotus sauzieri
  • Rodrigues Little Owl, Athene murivora
  • Laughing Owl, Sceloglaux albifacies (New Zealand)
  • Jamaica Least Pauraque, Siphonorhis americanus
  • Brace's Emerald, Chlorostilbon bracei (Bahamas 1900)
  • Gould's Emerald, Chlorostilbon elegans (Jamaica & Bahamas 1900)

Kingfishers, woodpeckers, etc.

Passerines

  • Stephens Island Wren, Xenicus lyalli
  • New Zealand Bush Wren, Xenicus longipes
  • Bay Thrush, Turdus ulietensis
  • Grand Cayman Thrush, Turdus ravidus
  • Kittlitz's Thrush, Zoothera terrestis
  • Chatham Island Fernbird, Bowdleria rufescens
  • Aldabran Brush Warbler, Nesillas aldabranus
  • Lord Howe Gerygone, Gerygone insularis
  • Guam Flycatcher, Myiagra freycineti
  • Maupiti Monarch, Pomarea pomerea (Society Islands 1850)
  • Piopio, Turnagra capensis
  • Lord Howe Island White-eye, Zosterops strenua
  • Kioea, Chaetoptila angustipluma
  • Hawaii 'O'o, Moho nobilis
  • Oahu 'O'o, Moho apicalis
  • Molokai 'O'o, Moho bishopi
  • Kauai 'O'o, Moho braccatus
  • Bachman's Warbler, Vermivora bachmanii
  • Akialoa,Hemignathus obscurus
  • Ula-'ai-hawane, Ciridops anna
  • Black Mamo, Drepanis funerea
  • Hawaii Mamo, Drepanis pacifica
  • Kakawahie, Paroreomyza flammea
  • Kona Grosbeak, Psittirostra kona
  • Lesser Koa-finch, Rhodacanthus flaviceps
  • Greater Koa-finch, Rhodacanthus palmeri
  • Greater Amakihi, Viridonia sagittirostris
  • Slender-billed Grackle, Quiscalus palustris (Mexico 1910)
  • Bonin Islands Grosbeak, Chaunoproctus ferreorostris
  • Kusaie Island Starling, Aplonis corvina
  • Mysterious Starling, Aplonis mavornata
  • Norfolk and Lord Howe Starling, Aplonis fusca
  • Bourbon Crested Starling, Fregilupus varius
  • Rodrigues Starling, Fregilupus rodericanus or Necropsar rodericanus
  • Huia, Heteralocha acutirostris

Related articles

External links and references

List adapted from that in Extinct Birds, Fuller, ISBN 0-19-850837-9