Friday, November 03, 2006

Giant hoatzins of doom

Inspired by the recent description of a new and exciting phorusrhacid – a giant predatory South American landbird – I have lately been producing various blog posts on members of this group, as you’ll know if you’re a regular reader. See Terror birds and More on phorusrhacids. There is lots more to say: I am planning also to blog about phorusrhacid skull and hand anatomy, and about their alleged survival into near-modern times. The horrible danger is that the distractions that constantly arise will cause me to veer off at a tangent, and already the paper on the British dinosaurs of the Kimmeridge Clay that Dave Martill, Sarah Fielding and I have finally had published has me wanting to move on to something else. I am also desperate to blog about the lions of Chobe National Park (Botswana), as their ability to kill adult elephants has finally been filmed and is due to be screened on TV next week. Furthermore, there is that AMAZING discovery of a bottlenose dolphin with a perfect pair of miniature hind-flippers (go here), and there is that Mantellisaurus thing. Stay tuned.

While I’m here I want to note some recent updates I’ve made to some articles. Firstly, thanks to comments that have been added by anonymous mammalogists (PLEASE leave your name when you leave a comment), I’ve done some minor updating to The first new European mammal in 100 years? We are now at 31 ‘100 year’ mammals. Secondly, inspired by some questions from Mark Abuys, I have also added some new comments to Graeme’s Pleistocene megafrog. Mark was interested in my mention of the carn-pnay, a crypto-frog from New Guinea with an alleged length of 30 cm.

To return to phorusrhacids...... in the previous posts I at least alluded to ideas about their affinities: it is universally agreed that their closest living relatives are the South American seriemas (or cariamids), and it is furthermore agreed that two fossil groups, the bathornithids of Eocene-Miocene North America and the idiornithids of Eocene-Oligocene Europe, are also close relatives of both seriemas and phorusrhacids. Several features unite these birds (Mayr 2002). They all have a strongly hooked bill, a simple, block-like hypotarsus (a site of ligament attachment on the posterior surface of the tarsometatarsus), distinctively proportioned toe bones, and a laterally compressed, strongly curved and sharp-tipped claw on the second toe (discussed previously here). All of these birds – idiornithids, bathornithids, cariamids and phorusrhacids – form a clade termed the Cariamae Fürbringer, 1888, and conventionally they’ve been regarded as part of Gruiformes, the group that includes rails, cranes, trumpeters and several other groups. A few other fossil groups have been suggested to be part of Cariamae, like the cunampaiids of Eocene Argentina.

Are cariamaens really close allies of rails and cranes? Storrs Olson (1985, p. 143) wrote that the classification of cariamaens within Gruiformes was ‘largely by default, as they do not clearly seem to belong in any other order’, and there is a long-running disagreement among ornithologists as to whether gruiforms are a natural group or not. We’ll look at this issue in the next post.

The South American landbird hypothesis

If you’re a regular reader of this blog you’ll know that I’m a big fan of ‘alternative’ theories on phylogenetic relationships (see, for example, We flightless primates). While I always find these ideas interesting, note the caveat that I do not necessarily endorse them: in fact they often turn out to be poorly supported or spurious. As it happens, one of my favourite ‘alternative’ theories involves cariamaens: it is the South American landbird hypothesis.

Based predominantly on the morphology of the carpometacarpus, some ornithologists have proposed that cariamaens are closely related to the Hoatzin* Opisthocomus hoazin**, that bizarre folivorous, arboreal bird that (uniquely among birds) practices foregut fermentation. In contrast to those of most other neornithines, the carpometacarpi of cariamaens and hoatzins possess a particularly broad, strongly bowed third metacarpal. This is also true of turacos and some cuckoos (indeed, many ornithologists have proposed that hoatzins might be close allies of turacos and/or cuckoos).

* Like ‘fossa’ and ‘sifaka’, ‘hoatzin’ is one of those words that is, apparently, not pronounced the way in which it is written. Some sources state that it is properly pronounced ‘watson’.

** That’s not a typo. Furthermore, the name Opisthocomus cristatus, used by some authors relatively recently (e.g., Chatterjee in The Rise of Birds) was coined (so far as I can tell) by Johann Illiger in 1811 and thus post-dates Statius Muller’s 1776 publication of the name Phasianus hoazin (that’s right - the hoatzin was originally described as a type of pheasant).

Hoatzin and seriema skeletons are also somewhat similar overall: I suppose you could believe that seriemas (and hence other cariamaens) are just big, long-legged hoatzins, modified for a cursorial, raptorial lifestyle whereas the various modifications possessed by hoatzins reflect their folivorous lifestyle (these features include a bizarre sternum where the keel is virtually absent anteriorly, thereby allowing room for the huge crop, and a notably deep, short pelvis) [the adjacent photos show, from top to bottom, a hoatzin skeleton, and a Cariama cristata skull and partial postcranium. Sorry the hoatzin photo is so bad]. Hoatzins and seriemas also possess a few bony and soft-tissue characters that are shared only by these birds, turacos and cuckoos: these include details of the hip musculature and the presence of distinctive bony recesses on the top of the pelvis.

Olson (1985) supported the possible monophyly of the South American landbird group, writing ‘the seriemas and hoatzins appear to be part of an early radiation of primitive land birds, members of which have persisted in South America, perhaps as a result of its isolation’ (pp. 143-144). He further suggested that falcons ‘probably represent a raptorial branch of this radiation’ (p. 144), a suggestion presumably based on the anatomy of caracaras. Note that falconids are essentially a South American group (only a few, recently evolved genera have left the continent). A few fossil taxa might also be interpreted as providing support for the monophyly of this group. Mourer-Chauviré (1983) regarded idiornithids as similar to both seriemas and hoatzins and her conclusions are similar overall to those of Olson (1985). Incidentally, both Olson and Mourer-Chauviré came up with the same idea independently. A long delay in publication meant that Olson (1985) came out after Mourer-Chauviré (1983), by which time Olson decided not to rewrite his text: ‘partly out of laziness and frustration but more to show that we arrived independently at the same basic conclusions’ (p. 151).

Among the most enigmatic of Cenozoic fossil birds is Foro panarium (image at left) from the Eocene Green River Formation of Wyoming: it seems to combine features of hoatzins, cuckoos and turacos but, interestingly, is also superficially raptor-like. This could be used to provide tentative support for Olson’s idea that falcons might be linked to hoatzins and other South American landbirds.

We saw above that hoatzins have often been linked with turacos, and that turacos share with hoatzins and seriemas that unusual and distinctive robust, bowed third metacarpal, as well as other characters. Might turacos also, then, be members of the South American landbird group? True, they aren’t South American but African (though with fossil representatives in Europe). In what might be regarded as a deviant version of the South American landbird group theory, Chandler (1997) proposed that turacos were the sister-taxon to Cariamae. In a novel twist, he further announced that New World vultures (vulturids, aka cathartids) were the next closest relatives of the turaco-cariamaen clade. He noted that fossils, osteology and preliminary biochemical data all provided supportive evidence for this novel hypothesis, though unfortunately he only ever published an abstract on it, and a full paper has yet to appear.

Based – it has to be said – on just a handful of detailed morphological characters, combined with some inference based on biogeography and superficial similarity, the South American landbird group theory suggests the following: that there might be a hoatzin-cariamaen clade, probably persisting as relicts in South America but more widespread during the early Cenozoic. It may perhaps involve turacos, and perhaps also falcons. Finally, New World vultures (which have all their earliest fossil occurrences in the Old World) might be allies of the South American landbird group. I am deliberately avoiding bringing in cuckoos and accipitrids (the latter noted by Olson as being possible allies of the turacos) in order to keep things simple-ish. Furthermore, the South American trumpeters (psophiids) share a number of characters with cariamaens and have also been regarded as part of this story by some authors.

Predictably, I cannot help but find the idea that condors, caracaras, turacos and hoatzins are all close kin of phorusrhacids highly appealing, but it does all seem very vague and sadly lacking in good character support. So, do larger studies – those incorporating molecular and/or morphological information from lots of taxa – support a possible link between these birds? See the next post (Goodbye my giant predatory, cursorial, flightless hoatzin).

For the latest news on Tetrapod Zoology do go here.

Refs - -

Chandler, R. M. 1997. New discoveries of Titanis walleri (Aves: Phorusrhacidae) and a new phylogenetic hypothesis for the phorusrhacids. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 17 (supplement to 3), 36-37.

Mayr, G. 2002. A new specimen of Salmila robusta (Aves: Gruiformes: Salmilidae n. fam.) from the Middle Eocene of Messel. Paläontologische Zeitschrift 76, 305-316.

Mourer-Chauviré, C. 1993. Les Gruiformes (Aves) des Phosphorites du Quercy (France). 1. Sous-ordre Cariamae (Cariamidae et Phorusrhacidae). Systématique et biostratigraphie. Palaeovertebrata 13, 83-143.

Olson, S. L. 1985. The fossil record of birds. In Avian Biology, Volume III, pp. 79-238.

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15 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ok, I'm very curious about this one. The last paper I read put hoatzins with doves, not seriemas and turacos.

6:55 PM  
Blogger Steve Bodio said...

The suspense is killing me...

7:10 PM  
Blogger Bora Zivkovic said...

Can't wait! Hoatzins have a special allure for me...

3:15 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"W" is spelled hu in much of Latin America because Spanish has no "w" sound and h is silent. I suppose someone heard "o" instead of "u" here.

In German, z alone is already pronounced "ts", so I suppose Müller simply forgot about the t (which is necessary in Spanish).

I'm sure the i is pronounced. To simply ignore all unstressed vowels is an English peculiarity that is rare elsewhere.

2:15 PM  
Blogger Steve Bodio said...

Falcons!

Can see some similarity between seriemas and Polyborus- type caracaras...

4:16 PM  
Blogger Mike Taylor said...

Really? How am I supposed to pronounce "fossa", then? Call my simple-minded, but I've been saying "fossa" all this (and I can hardly believe that on the occasions you and I have discussed sauropod presacrals the word "fossa" has never been spoken).

Is it pronounced "Throat-wobbler mangrove"?

5:09 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Having speat some time in Peru looking at these guys I can tell you that Darren is not far off on the pronunciation (at least in the Peru Amazon basin).

It's closer to 'whaat-tsin' than 'watson'.

Dull, but there we go.

8:10 AM  
Blogger Darren Naish said...

Response directed at Mike: the 'fossa' I was referring to is not the osteological concavity that you are thinking of, but the Madagascan euplerid carnivoran Cryptoprocta ferox. So fear ye not. For the record, the animal's name appears to be pronounced 'foooos-a' (with the 'a' semi-silent). At least that's how Malagasy people say it.

2:48 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Isn't the s a sh (Hungarian-style)?

4:44 PM  
Blogger Darren Naish said...

Response to David: some books say that fossa is pronounced 'foosh', which would agree with your comment. However, as I mentioned, Malagasy people say it 'foooos-a' (with semi-silent 'a'), and I think they know best.

12:50 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks. Maybe it varies. Madagascar is, after all, surprisingly big for a single language.

8:43 AM  
Blogger Mike Taylor said...

Ooooohh ...

That kind of fossa.

Right. :-)

2:19 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Just to throw the cat amongst the pigeons, I've also seen fossa (fossas pl.?) in Madagascar. Pronunciation seems to vary among the locals (at least from 'Tana to Morondava), but Darren is pretty much spot on.

3:48 PM  
Anonymous Scott said...

I remember when I went to the museum there are lots of framed picture and collection of some animal bones. I always got amaze whenever I see it.

4:09 PM  
Anonymous Melissa said...

Such a great article it was Hoatzins and seriemas also possess a few bony and soft-tissue characters that are shared only by these birds, turacos and cuckoos: these include details of the hip musculature and the presence of distinctive bony recesses on the top of the pelvis.In which Based predominantly on the morphology of the carpometacarpus, some ornithologists have proposed that cariamaens are closely related to the Hoatzin Opisthocomus hoazin, that bizarre folivorous, arboreal bird that (uniquely among birds) practices foregut fermentation. Thanks for sharing this article.

4:14 PM  

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