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Dromaius

 
Dromaius

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Dromaius



 
 
Dromaius is a genus of Ratite
Ratite

A ratite is any of a diverse group of large, flightless birds of Gondwanan origin, most of them now extinct. Unlike other flightless birds, the ratites have no keel on their sternum - hence their name which comes from the Latin for raft....
 present in Australia. There is one extant species, Dromaius novaehollandiae commonly known as the Emu.

In his original 1816 description of the emu, Vieillot
Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot

Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot was a France ornithologist.Vieillot described a large number of birds for the first time, especially those he encountered during the time he spent in the West Indies and North America, and 26 genera established by him are still in use....
 used two generic
Genus

A genus is a low-level taxonomic rank used in the classification of living and fossil organisms. The taxonomic ranks are domain , kingdom , phylum, class , order , family , genus, and species....
 names; first Dromiceius, then Dromaius a few pages later. It has been a point of contention ever since which is correct; the latter is more correctly formed, but the convention in taxonomy
Alpha taxonomy

Alpha taxonomy is the science of finding, describing and categorising organisms, thus leading to the recognition of proposed taxonomic groups, or taxon , which may then be naming conventions....
 is that the first name given stands, unless it is clearly a typographical error
Typographical error

A typographical error is a mistake made during, originally, the manual type-setting of printed material, or more recently, the typing process....
.






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Encyclopedia


Dromaius is a genus of Ratite
Ratite

A ratite is any of a diverse group of large, flightless birds of Gondwanan origin, most of them now extinct. Unlike other flightless birds, the ratites have no keel on their sternum - hence their name which comes from the Latin for raft....
 present in Australia. There is one extant species, Dromaius novaehollandiae commonly known as the Emu.

In his original 1816 description of the emu, Vieillot
Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot

Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot was a France ornithologist.Vieillot described a large number of birds for the first time, especially those he encountered during the time he spent in the West Indies and North America, and 26 genera established by him are still in use....
 used two generic
Genus

A genus is a low-level taxonomic rank used in the classification of living and fossil organisms. The taxonomic ranks are domain , kingdom , phylum, class , order , family , genus, and species....
 names; first Dromiceius, then Dromaius a few pages later. It has been a point of contention ever since which is correct; the latter is more correctly formed, but the convention in taxonomy
Alpha taxonomy

Alpha taxonomy is the science of finding, describing and categorising organisms, thus leading to the recognition of proposed taxonomic groups, or taxon , which may then be naming conventions....
 is that the first name given stands, unless it is clearly a typographical error
Typographical error

A typographical error is a mistake made during, originally, the manual type-setting of printed material, or more recently, the typing process....
. Most modern publications, including those of the Australian government, use Dromaius, with Dromiceius mentioned as an alternative spelling. However, the Dromiceius spelling was used by Russell
Dale Russell

Dale A. Russell is a Canadian geologist/palaeontologist, currently Research Professor at The Department of Marine Earth and Atmospheric Sciences of North Carolina State University....
 in his 1972 naming of the dinosaur Dromiceiomimus
Dromiceiomimus

Dromiceiomimus was a swift bipedal dinosaur from the late Cretaceous period, about 80 million to 65 million years ago....
.

Species and sub-species

Three different emu species
Species

In biology, a species is one of the basic units of biological classification and a taxonomic rank. A species is often defined as a group of organisms capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring....
 were common prior to European settlement
History of Australia

The written history of Australia began when Netherlands explorers first sighted the landmass in the 17th century. The interpretation of the history of Australia is currently a matter of History Wars, particularly regarding the British Empire settlement and early treatment of Indigenous Australians....
 in 1788:
  • Dromaius novaehollandiae, Emu, remains common in most of the more lightly settled parts of mainland Australia. Overall population varies from decade to decade according to rainfall; as low as 200,000 and as high as a million, but a typical figure is about half a million individuals. Although emus are no longer found in the densely settled southern and south-western agricultural areas, the provision of permanent stock water in arid regions has allowed the mainland species to extend its range. There are three current sub-species or races
    RACE (biology)

    RACE, or Rapid Amplification of cDNA Ends, is a technique used in molecular biology to obtain the full length sequence of an RNA transcript found within a cell....
     of the emu across Australia:
    • Dromaius novaehollandiae novaehollandiae - South-east Australia - whitish ruff when breeding.
    • Dromaius novaehollandiae woodwardi - North Australia - slender, paler.
    • Dromaius novaehollandiae rothschildi - South-west Australia - darker, no ruff during breeding.
    • Dromaius novaehollandiae diemenensis - Tasmania
      Tasmania

      Tasmania is an Australian island and States and territories of Australia of the same name. It is located south of the eastern side of the continent, being separated from it by Bass Strait....
       - The Tasmanian Emu
      Tasmanian Emu

      The Tasmanian Emu is an extinct subspecies of the Emu. It was found on Tasmania where it had become isolated during the Late Pleistocene. As opposed to the other insular emu taxa, the King Island Emu and the Kangaroo Island Emu, the population on Tasmania was sizable, meaning that there were no marked effects of small population size as in t...
      , became extinct around 1850.
  • Dromaius baudinianus, Kangaroo Island Emu became extinct around 1827 as a result of hunting and frequent fires. The larger mainland species was introduced to Kangaroo Island
    Kangaroo Island

    Kangaroo Island is Australia's third largest island - after Tasmania and Melville Island, Northern Territory. It is 112 kilometres southwest of Adelaide at the entrance of Gulf Saint Vincent....
     in the 1920s.
  • Dromaius ater, King Island Emu was about half the size of the mainland species. By 1805 it had been hunted to extinction by sealers and visiting sailors. Some individuals were kept in captivity in Paris
    Paris

    Paris is the Capital of France and the country's largest city. It is situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the ?le-de-France Regions of France ....
    , the last one dying in 1822.
  • Dromaius ocypus, a prehistoric species of emu (A.H. Miller, 1963), described from Late Pliocene
    Pliocene

    The Pliocene epoch is the period in the geologic timescale that extends from 5.332 million to 1.806 million years before present.The Pliocene is the second epoch of the Neogene period in the Cenozoic era....
     fossils (Mampuwordu Sands Formation, Lake Palankarinna, Australia) accepted as distinct nowadays.


A number of other Emu fossils from Australia described as separate species are now regarded as chronosubspecies
Chronospecies

A chronospecies is a species which changes physically, Comparative anatomy, Genetics, and/or behavior over time on an evolutionary scale such that the originating species and the species it becomes could not be classified as the same species had they existed at the same point in time....
 at best, given the considerable variation even between living individuals.. There are also some unidentifiable remains of emu-like birds from rocks as old as the middle Miocene
Miocene

The Miocene is a Geologic time scale of the Neogene period and extends from about 23.03 to 5.33 million years before the present. As with other older geologic periods, the rock beds that define the start and end are well identified but the exact dates of the start and end of the period are uncertain....
.

Footnotes