Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Hayashi Shoji
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code B000005431
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

A new tiny fossil penguin from the Late Oligocene of New Zealand and the morphofunctional transition of the penguin wing

Bibliography Type

Joint Author

Author

Tatsuro Ando ,  Jeffrey Robinson ,  Carolina Loch ,  Tamon Nakahara ,  Shoji Hayashi ,  Marcus D. Richards ,  Robert Ewan Fordyce

Summary

The Late Oligocene is a period of high penguin diversity, following major changes in the marine environment at the Eocene/Oligocene boundary and prior to the emergence of crown penguins in the Miocene. Historically, a large morphological gap existed between the most crownward Platydyptes among the Oligocene penguins from New Zealand and the Early Miocene stem penguins such as Palaeospheniscus from South America. Here we describe a new species that contributes to filling this gap. Pakudyptes hakataramea gen. et sp. nov. is the earliest tiny penguin, overlapping in size with the little penguin Eudyptula minor. Its distinctive combination of a well-developed proximal end of the humerus and an archaic elbow joint provides clues to the evolution of penguin wings. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that penguin wings evolved rapidly from the Late Oligocene to the Early Miocene, together with the acquisition of morphofunctional and hydrodynamical characteristics that enable the excellent swimming ability of modern penguins. As an indicator of aquatic adaptation, bone microanatomy shows a comparable structure to that of Eudyptula. The appearance of the smallest body size and the evolution of modern wings may have led to the ecological diversity of modern penguins, which confirms the importance of Zealandia in penguin evolution.

Magazine(name)

Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand

Publisher

Volume

Number Of Pages

StartingPage

660

EndingPage

681

Date of Issue

2024/07

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

DOI

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PMID

URL

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arXiv ID

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