Bird Group, Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Akeman St, Tring, Herts HP23 6AP, UK.
Main Street, Currie, King Island, Tasmania, Australia, 7256.
Biol Lett. 2021 May;17(5):20210012. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2021.0012. Epub 2021 May 26.
Islands off southern Australia once harboured three subspecies of the mainland emu (), the smaller Tasmanian emu () and two dwarf emus, King Island emu () and Kangaroo Island emu (), which all became extinct rapidly after discovery by human settlers. Little was recorded about their life histories and only a few historical museum specimens exist, including a number of complete eggs from Tasmania and a unique egg from Kangaroo Island. Here, we present a detailed analysis of eggs of dwarf emus, including the first record of an almost complete specimen from King Island. Our results show that despite the reduction in size of all island emus, especially the King Island emu that averaged 44% smaller than mainland birds, the egg remained similar sized in linear measurements, but less in volume and mass, and seemingly had a slightly thinner eggshell. We provide possible reasons why these phenomena occurred.
澳大利亚南部的岛屿曾经栖息着三种大陆鸸鹋的亚种(),即较小的塔斯马尼亚鸸鹋()和两种矮鸸鹋,即金岛鸸鹋()和袋鼠岛鸸鹋(),这些鸸鹋在被人类定居者发现后迅速灭绝。关于它们的生活史记录甚少,只有少数历史博物馆标本存在,包括来自塔斯马尼亚的一些完整的蛋和袋鼠岛的一个独特的蛋。在这里,我们对矮鸸鹋的蛋进行了详细分析,包括来自金岛的一个几乎完整标本的首次记录。我们的研究结果表明,尽管所有岛屿鸸鹋的体型都有所缩小,尤其是金岛鸸鹋的体型比大陆鸟类平均缩小了 44%,但蛋的线性测量尺寸仍保持相似,只是体积和质量较小,蛋壳似乎稍薄。我们提供了这些现象发生的可能原因。