*** Welcome to piglix ***

Réunion swamphen

Réunion swamphen
Porphyrio coerulescens.png
Hypothetical restoration by John Gerrard Keulemans, 1907

Extinct  (18th century) (IUCN 3.1)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Gruiformes
Family: Rallidae
Genus: Porphyrio
Species: P. coerulescens
Binomial name
Porphyrio coerulescens
(Selys, 1848)
LocationReunion.svg
Former range (encircled)
Synonyms

Apterornis coerulescens Selys, 1848
Cyanornis erythrorhynchus Bonaparte, 1854


Apterornis coerulescens Selys, 1848
Cyanornis erythrorhynchus Bonaparte, 1854

The Réunion swamphen, Réunion gallinule or oiseau bleu (Porphyrio coerulescens) is a hypothetical species of extinct rail from Réunion, Mascarenes only known from reports of travellers.

It is quite certain that such a bird once was present on the island. Six reports attest to its existence, and the genus Porphyrio is known as a colonizer of oceanic islands, having evolved into many local endemic species, of which only the takahē is still found to be extant nowadays.

In 1848, Sélys Longchamps placed the Réunion swamphen in the genus Apterornis, wherein he also included the Réunion solitaire and the red rail, but the name was preoccupied by Aptornis, a bird described by Richard Owen in 1844.

In November 1974, it was attempted to find possible fossil localities on the Plaine des Cafres. No caves or other promising locations were found, and it was determined that the attempt to prove the existence of this bird would have to wait pending a more thorough mapping of the area.

The bird was a bit larger than a chicken, or between a purple swamphen and a takahē in size, and of entirely dull blue coloration, with a red beak and feet.

Dubois' description is as follows (translated from French):

Oyseaux bleus: As big as the Solitaires; they have the plumage entirely blue, the beak and the feet red and made like those of fowls; they do not fly at all, but run extremely quickly, so that a dog can hardly catch them; they are very good.

The bird is attested to have exclusively occurred on the Plaine des Cafres, the high plateau of Réunion between the Piton des Neiges and the Piton de la Fournaise, from 1700 on at least (Dubois gives no locality information, but all other authors restrict the bird to the plateau). The missionary Père Brown's testimony of 1724 is generally believed to be the last unequivocal record of the bird, but an anonymous British naval officer reports stories about birds limited to the high plateau that can be killed with sticks in 1763.


...
Wikipedia

...