Hawkins's rail explained

Hawkins's rail (Diaphorapteryx hawkinsi), also called the giant Chatham Island rail or in Moriori as mehonui,[1] is an extinct species of flightless rail. It was endemic to the Chatham Islands east of New Zealand. It is known to have existed only on the main islands of Chatham Island and Pitt Island. Hawkins's rail was the largest terrestrial bird native to the Chatham Islands, around 40cm (20inches) tall and weighing about 2kg (04lb). It had a long, downward curving beak. Historic accounts likely referring to the bird by the name "mehonui" suggest that it was red-brown in colour, and it has been compared to the weka in ecological habits, using its beak to probe decaying wood for invertebrates. Hawkins's rail likely became extinct due to overhunting by the islands native inhabitants, the Moriori, and the bird is known from skeletal remains found in their kitchen middens.

Taxonomy

In 1892, Henry Ogg Forbes received several unusual fossil bones originating from the Chatham Islands sent by William Hawkins, amongst these was a distinctive skull, which Forbes realised represented a now extinct species of rail. He named the species Aphanapteryx hawkinsi in honour of Hawkins, placing the bird in the same genus as the extinct red rail from the Mascarene island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. Forbes proposed that a land bridge had once existed between Mauritius and the Chatham Islands, as part of his proposed lost continent of "Antipodea".[2] Forbes personally went to the Chatham Islands later that year to do additional collecting. Later in 1892, on the advice of Edward Newton, Forbes placed Hawkins's rail into the separate genus Diaphorapteryx,[3] though he later changed his mind and reverted to considering it to be a member of the genus Aphanapteryx. Between 1894 and 1895, Sigvard Jacob Dannefaerd collected several thousand bones of Hawkins's rail as part of a collection of “many hundreds of thousands” of bones collected from the Chatham Islands on behalf of the financier and zoologist Walter Rothschild. In 1896, the idea of a close relationship between the red rail and Hawkins's rail and the biogeographic connection between Mauritius and the Chatham Islands was criticised by Charles William Andrews due to there being no other overlapping species between the islands fauna, and Hans Friedrich Gadow considered the similar morphology of the two birds to be explained by parallel evolution.[4]

Evolution

A 2014 genetic study found that the closest relative of Hawkins's rail was the invisible rail (Habroptila wallacii), endemic to the island of Halmahera in the Maluku Islands, Indonesia, with their last shared common ancestor existing around 10 million years ago. The two rails were then in turn found to be most closely related to the genus Gallirallus.[5]

Description

Skeleton

In life, the bird is estimated to have been approximately 40cm (20inches) tall and weighed about 2kg (04lb). The wings of the bird are greatly reduced. The legs are robust with elongate toes. The beak is elongate and curves downwards (decurved).

Historical accounts

No contemporary European accounts of the bird exist, and it was long thought that Hawkins's rail became extinct hundreds of years prior to European discovery of the Chatham Islands in the early 19th century, with Millener 1999 suggesting that the extinction of Hawkins's rail took place between approximately 1550 and 1700 AD.[6] However, historic accounts based on recollections by Moriori of a bird referred to as the Mehonui[7] suggest that Hawkins's rail may have become extinct much later. An 1895 letter from Sigvard Dannefaerd belonging to Walter Rothschild describes the appearance, behaviour, and Moriori hunting method concerning the species:A second account was published by Alexander Shand in 1911, in his writings on Moriori cuisine:Shand's account mistakenly refers to Hawkins's rail as a type of parrot, but the remaining details are consistent with Dannefaerd's account. The source of the accounts was likely the Moriori elder Hirawanu Tapu (1824-1900), a noted source on Moriori tradition. The accounts suggest that the bird was dull brick-red in colour, that it spent much of its time pecking for invertebrates in decaying wood, similar behaviour is known from weka. The loud "Tue-ck" cry may have been the contact call. The "colonies" referred to in the accounts likely refer to family groups of five to eight individuals formed during the breeding season, as occurs in related rail species. Due to the strength of its beak it has been suggested to have been capable of consuming a wide variety of prey, including on ground dwelling chicks, such as those of petrels.[8]

Extinction

The presence of detailed accounts from the late 19th century suggest that the extinction of Hawkins's rail was more recent than previously supposed, and that the birds survived long after the arrival of the Moriori. It has long been known that the Moriori hunted the bird, due to their remains being found in midden deposits. Neither of the two accounts states the abundance of the birds or how often hunting of them occurred, but in their analysis of the accounts Joanne Cooper and Alan Tennyson suggest that the strategy of targeting what were likely the breeding groups of birds, containing both adults and juveniles, maximised impact on population. Cooper and Tennyson suggest that if the birds survived into the early European era, they may have finally become extinct due to the introduction of non-native mammals to the island, including cats, dogs, brown rats, and pigs, prior to the first survey of the islands fauna in 1840.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hawkins' rail New Zealand Birds Online . 2022-05-21 . www.nzbirdsonline.org.nz.
  2. FORBES. H- O.. 1892. New Extinct Rail. Nature. 45. 1166. 416. 1892Natur..45Q.416F. 10.1038/045416d0. 4047910. free.
  3. FORBES. H. O.. 1893. Mr. H. O. Forbes's Discoveries in the Chatham Islands. Nature. 48. 1232. 126. 1893Natur..48..126F. 10.1038/048126a0. 46553514. free.
  4. Andrews. C. W.. 1896. On the extinct birds of the Chatham Islands. Part I.: The osteology of Diaphorapteryx hawkinsi. Novitates Zoologicae. 73–84. 72.
  5. Garcia-R. Juan C.. Gibb. Gillian C.. Trewick. Steve A.. December 2014. Deep global evolutionary radiation in birds: Diversification and trait evolution in the cosmopolitan bird family Rallidae. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 81. 96–108. 10.1016/j.ympev.2014.09.008. 1055-7903. 25255711.
  6. Millener, P. R. 1999. The history of the Chatham Islands’ bird fauna of the last 7000 years – a chronicle of change and extinction. Pp. 85-109 In: Olson, S.L. (ed.) Avian paleontology at the close of the 20th century: Proceedings of the 4th international meeting of the society of avian paleontology and evolution. Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology No.89, Washington D.C., Smithsonian Institution Press.
  7. Probably meaning simply "large rail": As per Edward Tregear's Maori-Polynesian Comparative Dictionary, nui means "large", while Moriori meho is obviously not the same as Māori meho "untruth, falsehood", but rather the Moriori equivalent of Māori moho  - a shift from "o" to "e" is not uncommon in the Moriori language. Moho is the generic Polynesian term for rails, denoting the North Island takahē (Porphyrio mantelli) in Māori, the diminutive Zapornia sandwichensis in Hawaiian, but otherwise usually the widespread Australasian swamphen (Porphyrio melanotus) whose Māori name pūkeko was adopted from a "spirit-bird" of Polynesian mythology (compare its Hawaiian equivalent pueo). The corresponding "small rail" (Moriori: mehoriki), as per Dannefaerd's native informers, was Dieffenbach's rail (Hypotaenidia dieffenbachii)  - while the third endemic rail of the Chatham Islands, Cabalus modestus, was even smaller than Dieffenbach's rail, it was not considered a species of meho by the Moriori, but called mātirakahu (possibly in reference to its long and slender bill as according to Tregear māti(r)- denotes elongated thin objects such as a finger, stick, rod or spear).
  8. COOPER. JOANNE H. TENNYSON. ALAN J. D.. 2004. New evidence on the life and death of Hawkins' rail (Diaphorapteryx hawkinsi): Moriori accounts recorded by Sigvard Dannefaerd and Alexander Shand. Notornis. 51. 212–216. 2020-03-05. 2017-08-08. https://web.archive.org/web/20170808221818/https://notornis.osnz.org.nz/system/files/Notornis_51_4_212.pdf. dead.