Rallus adolfocaesaris, Alcover, Josep Antoni, Pieper, Harald, Pereira, Fernando & Rando, Juan Carlos, 2015

Alcover, Josep Antoni, Pieper, Harald, Pereira, Fernando & Rando, Juan Carlos, 2015, Five new extinct species of rails (Aves: Gruiformes: Rallidae) from the Macaronesian Islands (North Atlantic Ocean), Zootaxa 4057 (2), pp. 151-190 : 180

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4057.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BADD5843-1566-4BF8-A507-7369C1F5B950

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6119642

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A03A6F74-FFC2-5B78-63D3-11A1FAEA50A6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rallus adolfocaesaris
status

 

Rallus adolfocaesaris

Rallus adolfocaesaris n. sp. forms with the rails from Pico, Graciosa, Terceira and Santa Maria, a Macaronesian group of species that share the display of legs less robust and wings less reduced than R. lowei n. sp. The humerus of R. adolfocaesaris n. sp. is slightly more gracile than in R. aquaticus , but considerably wider than in R. lowei n. sp.. Its size (c. 33 mm in length) is similar to that of the Pico rail, and much larger than the São Miguel rail (20%) and São Jorge (31%) rails. The smaller humerus in relation to R. aquaticus suggests a shortening of the primary remiges, although this reduction was probably not so extreme as in R. lowei n. sp.

The hindlimb bones are gracile compared to R. lowei n. sp., and short in relation to R. aquaticus . R. adolfocaesaris n. sp. has a femur close in length to those of R. lowei n. sp., and slightly longer than in the rails of São Miguel, Terceira and Pico, but shorter than in R. aquaticus (7%) and longer than in R. minutus n. sp. (28%, see Figure 15 View FIGURE 15 ). Its tibiotarsus is slightly shorter than in R. lowei n. sp., R. carvaoensis n. sp. and R. montivagorum n. sp., shorter than in R. aquaticus (19%) and longer than in R. minutus n. sp. (11%, Table 1 & Figure 16 View FIGURE 16 ). The ANOVA performed on the tibiotarsus distal width (trait 25) identified significant morphological differences (F4,84=8.872; p <0.001) between R. adolfocaesaris n. sp. and R. carvaoensis n. sp. (p = 0.007) and R. minutus n. sp. (p = 0.002) but not with R. montivagorum n. sp. (p = 0.262) and R. aquaticus (p = 0.504). R. adolfocaesaris n. sp. has a similar tarsometatarsus length (U = - 0.342; p = 0.833) but a smaller tarsometatarsus distal (U = -2.449; p = 0.012) and proximal width (U = - 2.646; p = 0.006) than R. lowei n. sp. The tarsometatarsus is shorter (20%) than in R. aquaticus (U = - 2.838; p <0.001), and longer (25%, U = -2.236; p = 0.0.36) than in R. minutus n. sp. No differences were detected in tarsometarsus proximal (U = - 1.492; p = 0.171) and distal widths (U = -1.167; p = 0.262) between R. adolfocaesaris n. sp. and R. minutus n. sp. Seemingly, the ANOVA did not detect any relevant difference in tarsometatarsus length, and proximal and distal widths between R. adolfocaesaris n. sp. and the rails of São Miguel and Pico.

The ratio of humerus-to-femur length ratio (0.85) suggests that R. adolfocaesaris n. sp. was a flightless bird. According to this figure, and since the hindlimb bones are thinner than in R. lowei n. sp., the loss of the flying capacity should have been less extreme in R. adolfocaesaris than in the Madeiran rail. The short stout tarsometatarsus (relative to the femur) suggests that R. adolfocaesaris n. sp. could be a slow-pace runner.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Aves

Order

Gruiformes

Family

Rallidae

Genus

Rallus

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