Name:
Pelagornis.
Phonetic: Pel-ah-gor-nis.
Named By: Lartet - 1857.
Synonyms: Neodontornis, Palaeochenoides,
Tympanonesiotes.
Classification: Chordata, Aves,
Odontopterygiformes, Pelagornithidae.
Species: P. miocaenus (type),
P. chilensis, P. mauretanicus, P. sandersi.
Diet: Piscivore.
Size: Larger individuals easily a wingspan of 5
to 6 meters across. Pelagornis sandersi wingspan estimated
between 6 and 7 meters across.
Known locations: Coastal regions of Australia,
Europe, Morocco, New Zealand, North America, South America.
Time period: Eocene through to early Pleistocene.
Fossil representation: Skulls and partial skeletons
of many individuals.
Pelagornis
is a genus of large sea bird that as a genus existed for a very long
time during the Paleocene. So large is Pelagornis
that the genus is
now seriously considered to be a contender for the title of largest
known bird capable of flight. This is down to two factors. First
the discovery of the Pelagornis species P.
sandersi in 2014, a
species of Pelagornis with a wingspan estimated at
the lower end six
meters across, to as much as possibly as much as seven meters
across. Second, the previous ‘undisputed’ largest bird
Argentavis,
has now seen size revisions supported by several
palaeontologists to being around five and a half to six and a half
meter wingspan, as opposed to the seven meters plus as previously
suggested. This is all speculative however as neither Pelagornis
sandersi or Argentavis are known from
complete
remains, there is just
a slim probability that the wingspan of Pelagornis
sandersi slightly
exceeded that of Argentavis. Both of these birds
however would have
been dwarfed by the largest pterosaurs
of the Mesozoic.
Large
birds are immediately questioned about their ability to fly, and
there has even been speculation in some quarters that Pelagornis
could
not, though this is not a commonly accepted idea. The body plan of
Pelagornis was similar to that of a wandering
albatross (Diomedea
exulans), which is the largest flying bird by wingspan
alive
today. The wandering albatross spends much of its time over the open
ocean using the principal of dynamic soaring to stay airborne. This
is the practice of using the air currents created by the waves of the
ocean to continually glide close to the surface of the ocean. With
similar wings and body plan, it is not impossible that Pelagornis
could have used a similar method of flight, existing as a steady
glider more than a continuous flapper of wings.
Pelagornis
had what are loosely dubbed pseudo-teeth growing from the edges of the
bill, not true teeth which would grow from sockets in the jaw bone.
These pseudo-teeth were not that strong and often broken away from
fossils. They may still have been continually grown in life, and
would have allowed Pelagornis to grab hold of
slippery prey such as
fish and perhaps even cephalopods like squid. Overall Pelagornis
is
thought to have had a similar lifestyle to the aforementioned
wandering albatross. Food could be snatched from near the ocean
surface, and perhaps even a limited diving ability to pursue prey
underwater. The wandering albatross is also known to sometimes eat so
much in one go that it becomes too heavy to take off until the food has
passed through its system, and perhaps the same could have been true
on certain occasions for Pelagornis. If Pelagornis
also soared across
the open oceans like the wandering albatross does, then that could go
a long way to explaining why fossils of the Pelagornis
genus are found
upon numerous continents thousands of miles apart.
Further reading
- Osteology of a new giant bony-toothed bird from the Miocene of
Chile, with a revision of the taxonomy of Neogene Pelagornithidae.
- Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 30(5):1313-1330. -
G. Mayr & D. Rubilar-Rogers - 2010.
- Flight performance of the largest volant bird. - Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences - D. T. Kespa - 2014.
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