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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MIC-MOL |
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MOA , apparently the Maori name of the extinct
island
Island
Hutton , some 700-500 years ago. In the South
Great
The most striking feature of the moas, besides the truly gigantic size of some species, is the almost complete absence of the wings. In fact, the whole skeletons of the wings and of the shoulder girdle seem to have been lost, excepting Anomalopteryx dromaeoides, which, according to Hutton ,' had still some vestiges. Such a complete reduction of the whole anterior limb and girdle is unique among birds, but the cassowaries indicate the process. In conformity with these reductions the breastbone of the moas is devoid of any coracoidal facets; there is no trace of a keel, and the number of sternal ribs is reduced to three or even two pairs. The hind limbs are very strong; the massive femur has a large pneumatic foramen; the tibia has a bony bridge on the anterior surface of the lower portion, a character in which the moas agree only with Apteryx amongst the other Ratitae. The number of toes is four, unless the hallux is more or less reduced. The pelvis much resembles that of the kiwis.The skull has been monographed by T. J. Parker (" On the Cranial Osteology,- Classification and Phylogeny of the Dinornithidae," Tr. Z. Soc. (1893), xiii. 373431, pls. 5662); it resembles in its general configuration that of the emeus and cassowaries, while it differs from that of Apteryx most obviously by the short and stout bill. The feathers have a large after- shaft
shaft
' " The Moas of New Zealand," Tr. N. Zea. Inst. (1892), xxiv. 93172, pls. xv.xvii. The affinities of the moas are undoubtedly with the Australian Ratitae, and, in spite of the differences mentioned above, with the kiwis. In this respect Max Fiirbringer and T. J. Parker are in perfect agreement. The relationship with Aepyornis of Madagascar is still problematic. Whilst the moas seem to have been entirely herbivorous, feeding not unlikely upon the " shoots of ferns, the kiwis have become highly specialized worm-eaters. In this respect cassowaries and emeus hold an inter-mediate position, their occasional zoophagous (especially piscivorous) inclination being well known. Unmolested by enemies (Harpagornis, a tremendous bird of prey , died out with the Pleistocene), living in an equable insular climate, with abundant vegetation, the moas flourished and seem to have reached their greatest development in specialization, numbers, and a bewildering variety of large and small kinds, within quite recent
(H. F. G.) End of Article: MOA If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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