Barbados rail Temporal range:
Late Pleistocene
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Fulica podagrica ( Brodkorb, 1965) (invalid) |
The Barbados rail is a fossil rail species endemic to Barbados with an undetermined taxonomic status. [1] It was formerly described by Pierce Brodkorb in 1965 as Fulica podagrica. [2] However, this classification has been questioned by Storrs Olson when he described Brodkorb's material anew in 1974. [1] It is only known by Brodkorb's holotype which consists of a humerus and several leg elements including femur, tibiotarsus and tarsometatarsus fragments. [2] The humerus may not be specifically distinct from those of the American coot (Fulica americana) but most of the femur, tibiotarsus and tarsometarsus fragments are from a yet undescribed larger rail of an undetermined genus not related to Fulica. [2] Olson further assumed that Brodkorb's material might be a composite of several rail species. [2] The bone fragments were unearthed in Late Pleistocene deposits in Saint Philip Parish and Ragged Point on Barbados. [2]
Brodkorb's previous species epithet is derived from the Greek term "podagrikos" (which means affected with gout). This applied in allusion to the large size of the leg elements. [2]
Barbados rail Temporal range:
Late Pleistocene
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | |
Phylum: | |
Class: | |
Order: | |
Family: | |
Genus: | |
Synonyms | |
Fulica podagrica ( Brodkorb, 1965) (invalid) |
The Barbados rail is a fossil rail species endemic to Barbados with an undetermined taxonomic status. [1] It was formerly described by Pierce Brodkorb in 1965 as Fulica podagrica. [2] However, this classification has been questioned by Storrs Olson when he described Brodkorb's material anew in 1974. [1] It is only known by Brodkorb's holotype which consists of a humerus and several leg elements including femur, tibiotarsus and tarsometatarsus fragments. [2] The humerus may not be specifically distinct from those of the American coot (Fulica americana) but most of the femur, tibiotarsus and tarsometarsus fragments are from a yet undescribed larger rail of an undetermined genus not related to Fulica. [2] Olson further assumed that Brodkorb's material might be a composite of several rail species. [2] The bone fragments were unearthed in Late Pleistocene deposits in Saint Philip Parish and Ragged Point on Barbados. [2]
Brodkorb's previous species epithet is derived from the Greek term "podagrikos" (which means affected with gout). This applied in allusion to the large size of the leg elements. [2]