Minute Manuherikia duck

Manuherikia minuta Worthy, Tennyson, Jones, McNamara & Douglas, 2007

Order: Anseriformes

Family: Anatidae

New Zealand status: Endemic

Conservation status: Extinct

 
 
 
Minute Manuherikia duck. Holotype (left humerus). Specimen registration no. S.042317; image no. MA_I061826. Bed HH1a, Manuherikia River, St Bathans, March 2003. Image © Te Papa See Te Papa website: http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/objectdetails.aspx?irn=690451&term=S.042317

Minute Manuherikia duck. Holotype (left humerus). Specimen registration no. S.042317; image no. MA_I061826. Bed HH1a, Manuherikia River, St Bathans, March 2003. Image © Te Papa See Te Papa website: http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/objectdetails.aspx?irn=690451&term=S.042317

Duck bones are the most common fossil bones in the St Bathans Fauna, with most of them referable to three species in the endemic genus Manuherikia. The genus is named after the region in central Otago, and the name is also used for the geological formation from which the fossils are derived. Manuherikia is placed in the subfamily Oxyurinae (stiff-tailed ducks).

The St Bathans Fauna waterfowl species (five ducks, a shelduck and an unnamed goose) have mainly been defined based on the size and form of their humeri (upper wing bones). The smallest species by far in the assemblage was the minute Manuherikia duck, which was slightly smaller than a pink-eared duck (an Australian species that has been seen once in New Zealand).

The minute Manuherikia duck was described from six humeri and nine other bones likely to be of the same species, all from 19-16 million-year-old (Early Miocene) lake-bed deposits near the Manuherikia River, St Bathans, central Otago. The holotype (NMNZ S.42317, a complete, slightly crushed left humerus), five paratypes and all associated material are held at Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. The species name reflects the extremely small size of the bird.

There are no stiff-tailed ducks remaining in the New Zealand fauna, but three species in three genera (Malacorhynchus, Oxyura, Biziura) became extinct following human contact.

Weblinks

Te Ara

Te Papa collections

References

Worthy, T.H.; Lee, M.S.Y. 2008. Affinities of Miocene waterfowl (Anatidae: Manukerikia, Dunstanetta and Miotadorna) from the St Bathans Fauna, New Zealand. Palaeontology 51: 677-708.

Worthy, T.H.; Tennyson, A.J.D.; Jones, C.; McNamara, J.A.; Douglas, B.J. 2007. Miocene waterfowl and other birds from central Otago, New Zealand. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 5: 1-39.

Recommended citation

Miskelly, C.M. 2013. Minute Manuherikia duck. In Miskelly, C.M. (ed.) New Zealand Birds Online. www.nzbirdsonline.org.nz

Minute Manuherikia duck

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