Giant eagles: not the stuff
of legend
Scientists
learn genetic ancestry of birds that hunted prey heavier than most humans
Posted Jan. 5, 2005
Courtesy Public Library of Science
and World Science staff
The Lord of the Rings film trilogy
features colossal eagles swooping down to rescue humans from a desolate New
Zealand landscape. The image of giant eagles flying around New Zealand, while
fanciful, is not so far-fetched as it might appear, scientists say. Genetic
data published in the online research journal PLoS Biology this week shed new
light on the evolution of the extinct giant eagle that once ruled the skies in
New Zealand.
Before human settlement 700
years ago, New Zealand had no terrestrial mammals, apart from three species of
bats. Instead, about 250 species of bird dominated the terrestrial ecosystem. At
the top of the food chain was the extinct Haast’s eagle. With a wingspan of
2.5 to 3 meters (around 3 yards) and a weight of between 10 and 14 kilograms (up
to 31 pounds), Haast’s eagle was about 30-40%
heavier than the largest living bird of prey, the harpy eagle of Central and
South America. Haast’s eagle was approaching the upper weight limit of powered
flight, scientists say.
Haast’s eagle is the only
eagle known to have been the top predator in a major terrestrial ecosystem,
hunting moa, the giant herbivorous birds of New Zealand, weighing up to 200
kilograms (440 pounds).
Evidence of eagle strikes
remain, as holes and rents torn into the bones of moa, which show that the eagle
struck from the side, gripped the moa’s pelvic area with one foot, and killed
with a single strike by the other foot to the neck or head. The eagle is thought
to be the Hokioi of Maori oral history and is recorded in rock art, and
artifacts shaped from eagle bone prove that the eagle co-existed with early
Polynesians. However, there is no evidence that humans were targets for this
huge aerial predator.
In the research paper, New
Zealand researchers at Oxford University, U.K., extracted DNA from fossil eagle
bones about 2000 years old. Michael Bunce, who performed the research, said,
“When I began the research project with graduate student Marta Szulkin, it was
to prove the relationship of the extinct Haast’s eagle with the large
Australian wedge-tailed eagle. The DNA results were so radical that at first we
questioned their authenticity.”
The researchers says they
showed the New Zealand giant was in fact related to one of the world’s
smallest eagles--the “Little Eagle” from Australia and New Guinea, which
typically weighs under 1 kg. “Even more striking was how closely genetically
related the two eagle species were. We estimate that their common ancestor lived
less than a million years ago. It means an eagle arrived in New Zealand and
increased in weight by 10-15 times over this period; such rapid size change is
unprecedented in terrestrial vertebrates,” Bunce said.
New Zealand-based
palaeobiologist Richard Holdaway, who was part of the research team and who has
studied the eagle for the past 20 years, speculated as to how and why Haast’s
eagle grew to be so big, so quick: “The size of available prey and the absence
of predators are, we think, the key factors driving the size increase. The large
herbivores were available, and after killing a moa, an eagle would have been
able to feed unhindered.”
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