info:eu-repo/semantics/article
New material of Cayaoa bruneti Tonni, an Early Miocene anseriform (Aves) from Patagonia, Argentina
Fecha
2008-09Registro en:
Noriega, Jorge Ignacio; Tambussi, Claudia Patricia; Cozzuol, Mario Alberto; New material of Cayaoa bruneti Tonni, an Early Miocene anseriform (Aves) from Patagonia, Argentina; E Schweizerbartsche Verlags; Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Palaontologie - Abhandlungen; 249; 3; 9-2008; 271-280
0077-7749
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Noriega, Jorge Ignacio
Tambussi, Claudia Patricia
Cozzuol, Mario Alberto
Resumen
Cayaoa bruneti TONNI, 1979 is an early Neogene anseriform exhumed from marine sediments of the lower levels of the Gaiman Formation ("Patagoniano", Leonian Marine Stage, Chubut, Argentina). It was originally based on a partial tarsometatarsus that was not assigned to subfamily or tribe. We re-examine the holotype and study new tarsometatarsi, and previously undescribed skeletal elements including partial femora, tibiotarsi, partial humeri and carpometacarpi. Cayaoa bruneti was a strictly foot-propelled diving bird that exhibited an extreme reduction of the fore-limb, being probably the earliest recorded flightless duck. Similarly reduced wings are found in the distantly related anseriform Cnemiornis OWEN, 1866 of subrecent deposits of New Zealand, Chendytes MILLER, 1925 of the Pleistocene of California, and the moa-nalos of the Late Quaternary of Hawaii.