Posted on 08/13/2009 12:31:10 PM PDT by JoeProBono
Disguises and aliases might seem like the stuff of spy movies, but real-world scientific sleuths have rediscovered an "extinct" bird living under a false name and wearing a mask.
The Tasman booby has had it rough. It started when humans learned that the booby was easy to catch and tasty to eat.
Native to small islands off Australia and New Zealand, the species was dealt its first near fatal blow around A.D. 1200, when Polynesian settlers on Norfolk Island (map) hunted it to the brink of extinction.
Yet the Tasman booby managed to survive in one small population on Lord Howe Island (map) for another 500 years.
Then trouble came again, in the form of hungry European sailors, who were thought to have wiped out every last Tasman boobyuntil now.
Who Was That Masked Booby?
Researchers had long suspected that the "extinct" Tasman booby and the living masked booby of the North Tasman Sea were closely related. The birds have similar male and female body shapes and characteristically long wings, for starters.
But it was only when a group of naturalists, paleontologists, and geneticists pooled their expertise that these suspicions could be put to the test, said Tammy Steeves of the University of Canterbury in New Zealand, who led the new study.
The researchers compared fossilized and modern bones and DNA from specimens identified as Tasman and masked boobies.
Physically, the fossil bones looked strikingly similar to their modern counterparts. More important, the DNA was a perfect match, Steeves said.
The Tasman booby, the study suggests, never actually went extinct.
The bird's been hanging out for the past few hundred years under the "assumed" name of the masked booby.
The double-naming came about, Steeves said, "because paleontologists and biologists in recent decades did not communicate."
The fossil experts unknowingly compared ancient bones of female Tasman boobies to those of male "masked boobies." Unaware that Tasman booby females are markedly bigger than males, the paleontologists assumed they were looking at two species.
Rare Treat
Before the study, Steeves had expected the obviously similar species would be exposed as close evolutionary cousins.
"Imagine my surprise when we found that they were identical!" she said. "It's a rare treat to uncover such a definitive result.
"Many rediscoveries of 'extinct' birds are the result of an intensive search in the field, but ours is a little different," Steeves added. "We are the first to rediscover a bird in the laboratory."
A masked booby couple approaches an egg on the Phoenix Islands in an undated photo. Sorry, make that "a Tasman booby couple"an August 2009 study of DNA and fossils says the masked birds are actually Tasman boobies, a species previously thought to have gone extinct centuries ago.
Cool. I initially thought this was a wardrobe malfunction thread.
I was thinking - no I’m not going there.
Joe has a boobie fixation.
Unfair. I’m pinging the mods.
Thread useless with pictures
Hey I’m a guy and I like boobies, what can I say.
I wonder how it feels to be called a Booby scientist. If the shoe fits...
I thought this thread was going to be a about a stripper in the Witness Protection Program who was forced to wear pasties.
LOL, you and me both!
Wonder what kind of trap they used to catch these birds?
For all the humor it’s a neat story.
Hmmm, and they say that they’re delicious?
DId Nat’l Geo include the recipe?
Leave my boobies alone!
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