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February 14 , 2001

DNA Reveals Ancient Big Birds


By Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News

Scientists have sequenced DNA extracted from leg bone fossils of four gigantic extinct birds and have determined not only that the ancient ancestors of flightless birds competed with dinosaurs over food, but that these birds evolved over land bridges that once connected many of the world's continents.

The DNA came from one extinct Madagascan elephant bird and three moas, an ostrich-like bird that stood up to 10 feet tall and died out around 1300-1400 A.D. The moa sequence, which looked at mitochondrial, or cell energy, DNA is the most complete gene sequence determined for any extinct species, the researchers say.

Alan Cooper, a Natural Environmental Research Council Advanced Fellow at the University of Oxford, and his colleagues compared the extinct birds' DNA with that of current ratites, birds with flat breastbones unsuitable for flight muscles. This family includes the ostrich, emu, cassowary, rhea and kiwi.

Findings are published in the current journal Nature.

The DNA information enabled the scientists to piece together a history of flightless bird evolution and southern continent formation.

"(Our) data indicates that the ratites evolved very early on- in fact the speciation events took place before the K-T boundary (65 million years ago) when dinosaurs became extinct," said Cooper. "The pattern of speciation is consistent with the geological break-up of Gondwana, the Cretaceous super-continent that existed in the Southern Hemisphere from about 145 million years ago to after 80 million years ago."

Cooper and his team believe ancestors of today's flightless birds evolved into different species as Gondwana slowly broke into South America, Africa, peninsular India, Australia and Antarctica. He theorizes land bridges once connected Australia, Antarctica, India and Madagascar. For example, Cooper said ostriches received "a free ride on India up into the northern hemisphere about 65 million years ago" when a land link probably existed between India and Eurasia. Kiwis, on the other hand, evolved from birds that wound up on Australia, New Caledonia and New Zealand.

Cooper said, "Other land-based forms (plants, animals and certain birds) around the same time may well have used similar routes as the ratites."

David Penny, professor of theoretical biology at Massey University in New Zealand, agreed with the findings and added, "It looks to me that the earliest modern birds must have been feeding on the ground. They would have been in direct competition for food with the smallest dinosaurs, but had better escape mechanisms."

Perhaps crossing eroding land bridges into newly formed continents provided the big birds with the ultimate escape.


 

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