Bay thrush

Bay "thrush"
Watercolour painting by Georg Forster, 1774
Extinct  (by 1850)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: ?Sturnidae
Genus: ?Aplonis
Species: Aplonis ulietensis
Binomial name
Aplonis ulietensis
(Gmelin, 1789)
Synonyms
  • Turdus ulietensis Gmelin, 1789
  • Turdus badius Forster, 1844
  • Merula ulietensis Ramsay, 1879

The bay "thrush", also known as the bay starling, Raiatea starling, or the mysterious bird of Ulieta,[1] is an extinct bird species of uncertain taxonomic relationships that once lived on the island of Raiatea (formerly known as Ulietea, hence the specific epithet ulietensis), the second largest of the Society Islands in French Polynesia.

History

The species is known only from a 1774 watercolour painting of the lost type specimen, contemporary descriptions, and a few brief field notes. The artist was Georg Forster, who accompanied his father Johann Reinhold Forster as naturalists on James Cook's second voyage to the Pacific in HMS Resolution, which visited Raiatea in May and June 1774. The painting, now held by the British Natural History Museum, is annotated "Raiatea, female, June 1, 1774", and depicts the specimen obtained by the Forsters which entered the collection of Sir Joseph Banks and later disappeared.[1] The specimen was also described as the "bay thrush" by John Latham, who had seen it in Banks' collection, in his General Synopsis of Birds (1781–1785). However, because Latham only used English names, it was left to Johann Friedrich Gmelin to give it a scientific name in 1789.[2]

Raiatea was visited in 1850 by explorer and natural history collector Andrew Garrett, who failed to record the species.[1] Evidently it became extinct between 1774 and 1850, almost certainly as a consequence of the inadvertent introduction of black or brown rats to the island.[2]

Some confusion was caused when Richard Bowdler Sharpe tried to match the illustration with a specimen skin of unknown origin in the British Museum collection. This was eventually sorted out when the skin was identified as belonging to another enigmatic and extinct species – the Mauke starling Aplonis mavornata.[2]

Description

Lithograph by John Gerrard Keulemans: Plate XVI in Volume 5 of the Catalogue of the Birds in the British Museum (1880), based on the published descriptions, drawn at a time when the bird was thought to be a thrush, and after the type specimen had disappeared[3][4]

John Latham described it as follows: "Size of the song thrush: length eight inches and a half. Bill an inch and a quarter, notched at the tip, and of a reddish pearl-colour: general colour of the plumage rufous brown: quills edged with dusky: tail rounded in shape and dusky, legs dusky black."[1]

James Greenway gives a free and abridged translation (from the Latin) of Forster's description of the lost specimen as: "Head dusky marked with brown. Above dusky, all the feathers edged with reddish brown; wings dusky, the primaries edged with brown, as are the wing coverts and the tail feathers. Below ochraceous. Iris dark yellow. Twelve tail feathers. Tibiae compressed and with seven scutes. Tongue bifid at the tip and ciliated."[1]

Behaviour

The only recorded observations of the living bird come from Forster, who noted that it had a soft, fluting voice and lived among the thickets in the valleys of its island home.[2]

Taxonomy

It has been variously suggested that the species could be a thrush, a starling or a honeyeater.[4] However, without a specimen, its precise taxonomic position remains uncertain. Turdidae are unknown from the Society Islands, while the Huahine starling (Aplonis diluvialis) proves the former existence of Sturnidae.

In popular culture

A search for the lost specimen of the bay thrush is the subject of a novel – The Conjuror's Bird – by Martin Davies.[5]

Further reading

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Greenway (1967).
  2. 1 2 3 4 Fuller (2000).
  3. Seebohm (1880).
  4. 1 2 Godino (2010).
  5. "Museum reveals its Conjurer's Bird". nhm.ac.uk. Natural History Museum. Retrieved 16 June 2015.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, October 31, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.