Turvey Samuel T, Holdaway Richard N
School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, PB 4800 Christchurch, New Zealand.
J Morphol. 2005 Jul;265(1):70-86. doi: 10.1002/jmor.10341.
Recent reinterpretation of the giant moa Dinornis as consisting of two sexually dimorphic allospecies permits thorough site-by-site investigation of the ontogeny and population biology of this genus. Analysis of subadult skeletal material from natural swamp sites in the North and South Islands of New Zealand forms the basis for recognition of growth series for each long bone element, characterized by sequential formation of fossulae in the femur and fusion of bones in the tibiotarsus and tarsometatarsus. Femora reached progressive developmental stages more rapidly than the other long bones, but all three elements reached maturity at about the same time. Patterns of bone fusion in Dinornis are more similar to those in Apteryx than in Struthio, and kiwi are recognized as a suitable developmental analog for interpreting moa ontogeny. Samples from Bell Hill Vineyard Swamp (South Island) and Makirikiri swamp (North Island) are interpreted as representing autochthonous moa populations; comparison with stages of kiwi long bone development suggests that Dinornis at these sites had high adult survivorship in strongly K-selected populations, with 72.5-87.3% of individuals having achieved adult body mass, and 55.9-78.2% being sexually mature. The pattern of low fecundity and probable high longevity in both Dinornis species suggests that populations were vulnerable to loss of adults, primarily through hunting, rather than as a result of habitat destruction.
最近对巨型恐鸟(恐鸟属)的重新解释认为它由两个两性异形的同种异名物种组成,这使得对该属的个体发育和种群生物学进行逐地点的深入研究成为可能。对来自新西兰北岛和南岛天然沼泽地的亚成体骨骼材料进行分析,为识别每个长骨元素的生长序列奠定了基础,其特征是股骨上小窝的依次形成以及胫跗骨和跗跖骨中骨骼的融合。股骨比其他长骨更快地达到渐进发育阶段,但所有这三个元素大约在同一时间达到成熟。恐鸟的骨骼融合模式与几维鸟的更相似,而与鸵鸟的不同,几维鸟被认为是解释恐鸟个体发育的合适发育类比。来自贝尔山葡萄园沼泽(南岛)和马基里基里沼泽(北岛)的样本被解释为代表原地的恐鸟种群;与几维鸟长骨发育阶段的比较表明,这些地点的恐鸟在强K选择种群中具有较高的成年存活率,72.5 - 87.3%的个体达到了成年体重,55.9 - 78.2%的个体性成熟。两种恐鸟物种的低繁殖力和可能的高寿命模式表明,种群主要因狩猎而非栖息地破坏而容易受到成年个体损失的影响。