4.0 Article

A Terrestrial Vertebrate Palaeontological Reconnaissance of Lord Howe Island, Australia

Journal

PACIFIC SCIENCE
Volume 75, Issue 1, Pages 43-73

Publisher

UNIV HAWAII PRESS
DOI: 10.2984/75.1.2

Keywords

fossil; extinction; biogeography; white gallinule; Lord Howe pigeon; Lord Howe parakeet

Funding

  1. Australian Museum Foundation
  2. Australian Research Council [DE200101222]
  3. Australian Research Council [DE200101222] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Lord Howe Island, located 790 km northeast of Sydney, was one of the last islands discovered by humans in 1788. The island originally had a terrestrial avifauna with five endemic species and eight subspecies, but over-hunting and the accidental invasion of black rats led to the extinction of numerous species.
Lord Howe Island, situated 790 km northeast of Sydney in the Tasman Sea, was first encountered in February 1788, and one of the last islands discovered by humans. Apparently, Polynesians were unaware of the island. At the time of discovery, seabirds dominated the island, with a terrestrial avifauna comprising five endemic species and eight subspecies. The island was initially a whaling refurbishment station until establishment of a settlement in 1834, which resulted in the extinction of three endemic birds due to over-hunting. The accidental invasion of black rats in 1918 resulted in another wave of extinctions, with the loss of five passerines, followed by an endemic owl c. 1940. Museum skins represent all but one of these species, but almost no skeletal remains exist. Here, we present the results of a palaeontological survey that explored subfossil depositaries on Lord Howe Island, including analysis of hitherto unstudied Lord Howe bird subfossil collections held in Australian museums. Our discoveries include the first known skeletal elements of six extinct species, five recorded in context, and a particularly fossil-rich sand dune site on Lord Howe Island that contained hundreds of terrestrial bird subfossils.

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