Close X
Wednesday, December 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

New Species Of Flightless Bird Discovered In Fossil On Vancouver Island Beach

The Canadian Press, 16 Dec, 2015 12:26 PM
    VICTORIA — A family out for a stroll on southern Vancouver Island stumbled upon the extraordinary fossilized remains of a 25-million-year-old flightless bird that has created a flap in the world of paleontology.
     
    The fossil was in good enough condition for researchers to identify the animal as a new species of a plotopterid, a long-extinct penguin or cormorant-like bird never before found in Canada.
     
    A collarbone from the bird was found inside a slab of rock on a Sooke, B.C., beach.
     
    It's only the second set of fossilized bird bones found on southern Vancouver Island since 1895, said bird expert Gary Kaiser of the Royal B.C. Museum.
     
    Fossils of birds are extremely rare because the fragile and hollow bones don't hold up to crushing weight, acidic soils and elements like other fossils do.
     
    "They get broken up, crushed easily," Kaiser said in an interview Tuesday. "The bones simply dissolve. They disappear."
     
    In this case, the sandstone and lack of acid in the water seemed to preserve the fossil, he said.
     
    A father, daughter and son were out for a walk two years ago when they found the bone in a slab of rock that had fallen from the nearby cliffs, he said.
     
    The daughter spotted the fossil. Her brother carried the slab off the beach, before the father brought it to the museum.
     
    Next to a skull, the collarbone is the best bone to find because it sits at the shoulder where the wings function and where the collar blade, arm bone and sternum are attached.
     
    "It is the most informative bone in a bird skeleton. It tells you more than anything else about what the bird does for a living," Kaiser said.
     
    The long, skinny bone wasn't anything like he had ever seen before.
     
    "Right away, I knew it was an unusual bone," he said, noting that's when he linked it to the plotopterid fossil.
     
    Relatives of the bird have been found in Japan and in Oregon and California, but none has been as small.
     
    "Of those several hundred birds, all but two of them are huge. I mean they're birds that probably weighed 200 kilograms when they were alive and stood six-foot tall," Kaiser said.
     
    This animal was about the size of cormorant.
     
    Kaiser and his colleague Junya Wantanabe of Kyoto University named the bird Stemec suntokum because it's a new species. The name means long-necked waterbird in the language of the T'Sou-Ke First Nation who live in the area.
     
    Kaiser said he believes that if they had the fossil's brain case the animal would look like a penguin, but an American man who studies plotopterids is convinced they are more like cormorants.
     
    "It's a bit of a fight, but not unusual in biology because there's no way of telling," he added.
     
    The discovery announcing the new species has been published in the online journal Palaeontologia Electronica.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Government Tables Bill To Create Provincial Registry For All Firearms

    Quebec Government Tables Bill To Create Provincial Registry For All Firearms
    Public Security Minister Pierre Moreau said today each gun in Quebec will have its own number.

    Quebec Government Tables Bill To Create Provincial Registry For All Firearms

    Manitoba Aiming To Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Create Green Jobs

    He says the province will address the problem by creating 6,000 green jobs in the next five years.

    Manitoba Aiming To Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Create Green Jobs

    Liberal Plan To Hike Taxes On Top One Per Cent May Lead To Revenue Hole: Study

    Liberal Plan To Hike Taxes On Top One Per Cent May Lead To Revenue Hole: Study
    TORONTO — The Liberal government's plan to switch some of the tax burden from middle-income earners to the top one per cent will likely lead to multibillion-dollar annual revenue shortfalls for Ottawa and the provinces, according to the C.D. Howe Institute.

    Liberal Plan To Hike Taxes On Top One Per Cent May Lead To Revenue Hole: Study

    Liberals Announce Advisory Board To Quickly Choose New Independent Senators

    Liberals Announce Advisory Board To Quickly Choose New Independent Senators
    OTTAWA — The Trudeau government is setting up a five-member advisory board to fill the empty seats in the Senate with independent senators.

    Liberals Announce Advisory Board To Quickly Choose New Independent Senators

    Retired Couple In Orangeville, Ont., Opens Home To Syrian Refugees

    Retired Couple In Orangeville, Ont., Opens Home To Syrian Refugees
    The Logels' three children and five grandchildren, themselves frequent visitors to the family homestead located on four hectares outside town, are coming for Christmas, though the Logels recognize the holiday isn't one their guests celebrate.

    Retired Couple In Orangeville, Ont., Opens Home To Syrian Refugees

    Quebec Tells Doctors To Respect Court Decision Suspending Right-to-die Law

    Quebec Tells Doctors To Respect Court Decision Suspending Right-to-die Law
    MONTREAL — Doctors must respect a court ruling suspending Quebec's assisted-suicide law but the government won't go on a "witch hunt" against physicians who offer palliative sedation,  the province's health minister said Wednesday.

    Quebec Tells Doctors To Respect Court Decision Suspending Right-to-die Law