Ratites (/ˈrætaɪts/) are a polyphyletic group consisting of all birds within the infraclass Palaeognathae that lack keels and cannot fly. They are mostly...
44 KB (4,458 words) - 13:50, 2 November 2024
This is a list of ratites. Extinct (EX) – No known living individuals Extinct in the wild (EW) – Known only to survive in captivity, or as a naturalized...
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Flightless bird (section Palaeognathae (ratites))
ability to fly. There are over 60 extant species, including the well-known ratites (ostriches, emus, cassowaries, rheas, and kiwis) and penguins. The smallest...
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representatives are often known as ratites), and their closest living relatives are kiwi (found only in New Zealand), suggesting that ratites did not diversify by vicariance...
34 KB (3,508 words) - 17:53, 29 October 2024
extant branches of flightless lineages (plus two extinct clades), termed ratites, and one flying lineage, the Neotropic tinamous. There are 47 species of...
50 KB (5,558 words) - 02:44, 15 October 2024
Ostrich (category Ratites)
infra-class Palaeognathae, a diverse group of flightless birds also known as ratites that includes the emus, rheas, cassowaries, kiwis and the extinct elephant...
19 KB (1,709 words) - 12:27, 2 November 2024
Kiwi (bird) (category Ratites)
(/ˈæptərɪks/). Approximately the size of a domestic chicken, kiwi are the smallest ratites (which also include ostriches, emus, rheas, cassowaries and the extinct...
63 KB (5,466 words) - 04:57, 2 November 2024
Elephant bird was a ratite; it could not fly, and its breast bone had no keel. Because Madagascar and Africa separated before the ratite lineage arose, Aepyornis...
21 KB (2,114 words) - 12:34, 11 October 2024
Moa (category Ratites)
sister group to ratites. The nine species of moa were the only wingless birds, lacking even the vestigial wings that all other ratites have. They were...
74 KB (8,014 words) - 09:03, 31 October 2024
the genus Dromaius and the third-tallest living bird after its African ratite relatives, the common ostrich and Somali ostrich. The emu's native ranges...
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cassowary, alongside the dwarf cassowary and the northern cassowary. It is a ratite and therefore related to the emu, ostrich, rhea and kiwi. The Australian...
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the genus Casuarius in the order Casuariiformes. They are classified as ratites: flightless birds without a keel on their sternum bones. Cassowaries are...
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species that many have lost the ability to fly. This has occurred in several ratites including the kiwi and the cassowary as well as in the dodo and the kākāpō...
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regarded as the sister group of the flightless ratites, but recent work places them well within the ratite radiation as most closely related to the extinct...
68 KB (8,119 words) - 20:15, 2 October 2024
Rheidae (category Ratites)
Rheidae /ˈriːɪdiː/ is a family of flightless ratite birds which first appeared in the Paleocene. It is today represented by the sole living genus Rhea...
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and ratite birds. Eucalypts are the predominant trees in much of Australia and New Guinea. New Zealand has no native land mammals, but also had ratite birds...
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Struthio wimani is an extinct species of ratite bird from the Pliocene of China. Zicha, Ondrej (1999) beautyofbirds.com (2010) beautyofbirds.com (2010)...
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Struthio kakesiensis is an extinct oospecies of ratite bird known from eggshell fossils found in Laetoli, Tanzania. It was related to the modern day Struthio...
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South Island giant moa (category Ratites)
The moa were large, flightless birds with a sternum, but without a keel: ratites. They also had a distinctive jaw and palate. The origin of these birds...
12 KB (1,372 words) - 12:00, 26 September 2024
Dromaius (category Ratites)
Dromaius (from greek δρομαίυς "runner") is a genus of ratite present in Australia. There is one extant species, Dromaius novaehollandiae, commonly known...
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orders: Carinatae (from carina, "keel"), having a pronounced keel; and ratites (from ratis, "raft" – referring to the flatness of the sternum), having...
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Central and South America) and the ratites, which nowadays are found almost exclusively in the Southern Hemisphere. The ratites are large flightless birds, and...
28 KB (3,240 words) - 13:21, 2 July 2024
the Antarctic peninsula, Ratites may have similarly traveled overland from South America to colonise Australia; a fossil ratite is known from Antarctica...
75 KB (7,761 words) - 19:08, 28 October 2024
more basal ratite. It may be related to the mysterious Remiornis, a putative ratite known from the Eocene of France. Various other ratite remains also...
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Panbiogeographic tracks of the ratite birds, the southern beech Nothofagus, and the New Zealand frog Leiopelma...
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fossils may also belong to the family. Ostriches are classified in the ratite group of birds, all extant species of which are flightless, including the...
11 KB (1,106 words) - 17:50, 13 January 2024
Multituberculates and the first rodents widespread. First large birds (e.g. ratites and terror birds) and mammals (up to bear or small hippo size). Alpine...
174 KB (9,743 words) - 14:34, 29 October 2024
in part from species of Australian origin, such as marsupial mammals and ratite birds. The flora of Indomalaya blends elements from the ancient supercontinents...
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Common ostrich (category Ratites)
species of ostriches, the only living members of the genus Struthio in the ratite order of birds. The other is the Somali ostrich (Struthio molybdophanes)...
122 KB (13,388 words) - 04:49, 11 October 2024
Eogeranoides is an extinct monospecific and dubious genus of ratite. The type and only known species, Eogeranoides campivagus, described in 1969 by Joel...
2 KB (124 words) - 12:35, 14 October 2024