New research has identified the extent to which human colonization and hunting contributed to the extinction of New Zealand's ...
Moa were large, flightless birds that wore magnificent cloaks of feathers and lived in New Zealand until about five hundred ...
For the first time, ancient DNA from droppings left by New Zealand’s flightless moa identifies actual species of fungi the doomed birds ate. The snacks, including purple lumps of a trufflelike ...
Innovative advances in DNA sequencing are making it possible to revive extinct bird species like the dodo, great auk, ...
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New Zealand's flightless birds are retreating to moa refugesResearchers have found New Zealand's endangered flightless birds are seeking refuge in the locations where six species of moa last lived before going extinct. An international team of researchers ...
Moa-nalo are a group of flightless birds that lived in Hawaii for over 3 million years until humans arrived. They had large, massive turtlelike beaks, complete with teeth. Some species were as ...
Boast and a team of researchers, for example, are using fossilized dung to learn more about the diets of extinct flightless birds called moa that once roamed around New Zealand. Coprolites helped ...
New research has identified the extent to which human colonisation and hunting contributed to the extinction of New Zealand's ...
A study on bird intelligence found that emus and rheas can solve puzzles to access food, proving they can innovate.
A very large collection of moas from New Zealand, including several type specimens and the original fragment of long bone that allowed Richard Owen to deduce the existence of these large extinct ...
New research has identified the extent to which human colonisation and hunting contributed to the extinction of New Zealand's giant flightless bird ...
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