At some level lots of of hundreds of years in the past, a sure flightless hen colonized an Indian Ocean atoll off the southeast coast of Africa. Then the atoll sank beneath the waves, killing off the whole lot on land.
That would have been the top for the Aldabra rail (Dryolimnas cuvieri aldabranus) — besides by some means it wasn’t.
Today, flightless Aldabra rails are the Indian Ocean’s final species of flightless hen. But since they couldn’t have escaped their watery graves by flying when their namesake home atoll disappeared, how did they arrive again?
They weren’t on rebreathers. Instead, the British Natural History Museum found, the Aldabra rail is the one recognized hen to have change into flightless twice.
“There is no other case that I can find of this happening,” research co-author Dr. Julian Hume instructed the Museum’s online publication. “It wasn’t as if it were two different species colonizing and becoming flightless. This was the very same ancestral bird.”
The story begins over 136,000 years in the past. That’s the date of the oldest Aldabra rail fossil discovered within the atoll’s sediment. It’s vital as a result of Aldabra rails solely evolve from one ancestral guardian.
The white-throated rail (Dryolimnas cuvieri) is a flying hen endemic to Madagascar. Its build is much like its flightless evolutionary offspring — solely airier.
At some level previous to 136,000 years in the past, white-throated rails arrived on Aldabra, settled down, and misplaced the power to depart.
The Natural History Museum defined the phenomenon as a bent within the birds to build up big numbers and instantly make an exodus. Specific causes for the habits stay unknown, however one thing — diminishing meals sources, overcrowding, and so forth. — triggers the white-throated rails to disperse.
They did, then misplaced flight however flourished on an Aldabra teeming with weird prehistoric wildlife. Rails foraged on the forest flooring amongst large tortoises, and endemic duck species lived on lagoons with horned crocodiles swimming beneath.
Then, the fossil document abruptly disappears. This isn’t a rarity in and of itself. Total inundation has worn out life on coral atolls like Aldabra all through historical past, the museum identified.
When the tides of this most recent, 136,000-year-old annihilation receded, life cropped again up on Aldabra. And Hume positioned extra rail fossils within the sediments courting to the period.
“We found the leg bone of a rail in these deposits,” he instructed the museum. “But from that one bone we can see that it is already becoming more robust when compared to the flying rail, showing that the bird is getting heavier and so losing its ability to fly.”
According to the journal PLOS One, solely 26 hen households worldwide have skilled evolutionary flight loss (sometimes on islands). With their tendency to desert land en masse, white-throated rails are adept at discovering islands — and why they go flightless so shortly would possibly mirror their hatchling habits.
Hume stated the birds are born with the power to run “really fast” proper out of the egg. They scamper round after their mother and father, who observe bigger fauna like tortoises to snatch insects from disturbed leaf litter.
From fossil deposits, Hume’s group discovered the white-throated rail grew to become flightless once more in beneath 16,000 years — probably the fastest-ever transition to flightlessness in a hen.