Ending decades of doubt, ‘biggest bird’ dispute put to nest

    AFP
    After more than a century of conflicting evidence, Anglo-French animosity and an H.G. Wells novella involving murder most fowl, scientists said on Wednesday (Sept 26) they have finally solved the riddle of the world’s largest bird.
    For 60 million years the colossal, flightless elephant bird – Aepyornis maximus – stalked the savannah and rainforests of Madagascar until it was hunted to extinction around 1,000 years ago.
    In the 19th century, a new breed of buccaneering European zoologists obsessed over the creature, pillaging skeletons and fossilised eggs to prove they had discovered the biggest bird on Earth.But a study released on Wednesday by British scientists suggests that one species of elephant bird was even larger than previously thought, with a specimen weighing an estimated 860kg – about the same as a fully grown giraffe.
    “They would have towered over people,” James Hansford, lead author at the Zoological Society of London, told AFP.”They definitely couldn’t fly as they couldn’t have supported anywhere near their weight.” In the study, published in the journal Royal Society Open Science, Mr Hansford examined elephant bird bones found around the world, feeding their dimensions into a machine-learned algorithm to create a spread of expected animal sizes. Until now, the largest-ever elephant bird was described in 1894 by the British scientist C.W. Andrews as Aepyornis titan – a larger species of Aepyornis maximus.But a French rival of Andrews dismissed the discovery of titan as just an outsized maximus specimen and for decades the debate remained deadlocked.

    Mr Hansford said his research proved titan was indeed a different species. But he also found that its bones were so distinct from other elephant bird specimens that titan was in fact an entirely separate genus.

    Named Vorombe titan – Malagasy for “big bird” – the creature would have stood at least 3m tall and had an average weight of 650kg, making it the largest bird genus yet uncovered.

    “At the extreme extent, we found one bone that really pushed the limits of what we now understand about bird size,” said Mr Hansford, referring to the 860kg specimen.

    “And there were some that led up to that too, so it’s not an outlier – there was a range of masses that were extraordinarily large.” .

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