Systematics, morphology and ecology of rails (Aves: Rallidae) of the Mascarene Islands, with one new species
Author
Hume, Julian Pender
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-07-03
4626
1
1
107
journal article
26212
10.11646/zootaxa.4626.1.1
29c4832f-9970-4c9c-9bcb-2564407ac481
1175-5326
3335513
6CC12BAF-968F-4BDE-9315-340AF12A76EC
Genus
Porphyrio
Brisson, 1760
†
Réunion
Gallinule (Oiseaux Bleu) ‘
Porphyrio caerulescens
’ (
Sélys-Longchamps, 1848
)
Oyseaux bleus
Dubois, 1674
, p.170;
Oustalet, 1897
, p.99;
Oliver, 1898
, p.77;
Cheke & Hume, 2008
, p.43
Oiseaux bleu
La Roque, [
1701–10
] (in
Lougnon, 1992
, p.209);
Le Gentil, 1727
, p.103
Oiseaux bleuff
Feuilley, [1705] (in
Lougnon 2005
, p.128)
Gros oiseau
Brown, 1773
, p.332
Apterornis caerulescens
Sélys-Longchamps, 1848
, p.294
;
Cyanornis erythrorhynchus
Bonaparte, 1854
, p.3
;
Hachisuka, 1953
, p.155;
Hume, 2013
, p.219, 2014a, p.37
Porphyrio
(
Notornis
?)
coerulescens
Schlegel, 1857
, p.142, 1858
, p.379; 1866a, p.167;
Pitot, 1905
, p.372 (orthographic error)
Porphyrio caerulescens
Sharpe, 1894
, p.193
;
Olson, 1977
, p.365;
Hume
et al
. 2006
, p.15;
Hume & Walters, 2012
, p.113;
Cheke,
2013b, p.13;
Hume, 2013
, p.219, 2017, p.131;
Safford & Hawkins, 2013
, p.45; del
Hoyo & Collar, 2014
, pp.352,773
Notornis
sp.
Oustalet, 1897
, p.99
Porphyrio
Notornis
Pitot, 1914
, p.89
Porphyrio madagascariensis
Berlioz, 1946
, p.8
;
Barré & Barau, 1982
, p.34
Porphyrio porphyrio
Barré
et al
. 1996
, p.36
Cyanornis coerulescens
Hachisuka, 1953
, p.155
;
Hume, 2013
, p.219; 2014a, p.37 (orthographic error)
Porphyrio
sp. Strickland (in
Strickland & Melville, 1848
, p.59);
Cheke & Hume, 2008
, p.128, pl.8;
Safford & Hawkins, 2013
,
p.348
Apterornis coerulescens
Rothschild, 1907a
, p.145, pl.32, 1907b, p.198;
Fuller, 1987
, p.241; 2001, p.386 (orthographic error)
Porphyrio coerulescens
Cheke, 1987
, p.37
;
Adams
et al.
2003
, p.344 (orthographic error)
Cyanornis
(?=
Porphyrio
)
caerulescens
Mourer-Chauviré
et al
. 2006
, p.43
Holotype
:
None designated.
Measurements:
None available.
Type locality:
Plaine des Cafres,
Réunion
, Mascarene Islands.
Distribution:
Réunion
, Mascarene Islands.
Etymology:
Inferred L.
caerulescens
, bluish, in reference to the all blue plumage colouration.
Remarks:
Perhaps the most enigmatic of all rails, the
Réunion
Gallinule or Oiseaux bleu once occurred on
Réunion
Island, but as yet not a shred of physical evidence of any kind has been found to resolve its taxonomy. There can be no doubt that it was a large, terrestrial
Porphyrio
derivative (
Olson 1977
;
Mourer-Chauviré
et al.
1999
); the all blue colouration is only found in
Porphyrio
and not
Fulica
or
Gallinula
, and possessed characters—larger size and more robust legs—usually associated with reduced powers of flight. There has been some disagreement regarding the size of the
Réunion
Gallinule (see
Cheke & Hume 2008
), as
Dubois (1674)
stated that they were ‘the size of solitaires’, and Feuilley (1705) that that they were ‘as large as a capon’. However, the
Réunion
Solitaire
Threskiornis solitarius
(
Sélys-Longchamps, 1848
)
would have been no more than
68 cm
in total (the size of the African Sacred
Ibis
Threskiornis aethiopicus
(
Latham, 1790
)
including tail), and capons (or domestic chickens) were approximately the size of the ancestral Red Jungle Fowl
Gallus gallus
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
, up to
70 cm
in total length including the long tail, so there is no real size discrepancy between these two contemporary accounts (
Hume 2017
).
The
Réunion
Gallinule was mentioned on a number of occasions by trustworthy observers, being considered good game. Unlike Purple Gallinule, it could easily be caught and killed with sticks, despite being a fast runner, and it was also reluctant to fly (
Cheke & Hume 2008
). The
Réunion
Gallinule appears to have been restricted to the mountains, at least latterly, particularly on a montane plateau called the Plaine des Cafres at around
1,600
–1,800
m
in altitude in south-central
Réunion
(Feuilley 1705;
Cheke & Hume 2008
) (
Fig. 3
). The area comprises open woodland in subalpine forest steppe with marshy pools (
Cheke & Hume 2008
). Very little was recorded about its ecology.
Dubois (1674: 170)
, while staying on
Réunion
in
1671–72
, gave the first description (my translation):
Oyseaux bleus
: As big as the solitaires [
Threskiornis solitarius
]; their plumage is entirely blue, the beak and the feet red and made like those of hens; they do not fly, but run extremely quickly, so that a dog has difficulty catching them in a chase; they are very good [to eat].
Feuilley (1705) in 1704 described them further (translation from Cheke & Hume 2008: 128):
The Oiseaux bleuff live in the plaines on top of the mountains, and especially on the Plaine des Cafres. They are the size of a large capon, blue in colour. Those that are old are worth nothing to eat because they are so tough, but when they are young they are excellent. Hunting them is not difficult because one kills them with sticks or with stones.
FIGURE 31.
Comparison of the skins, dorsal view above, ventral view below, of
Dryolimnas cuvieri
. From left to right:
D. c. cuvieri
MNHN-Zo-2011-535 ♀ holotype;
D. c. cuvieri
NHMUK 1931.8.18.1000 ♂;
D. c. cuvieri
NHMUK 1931.8.18.999 ♀;
D. c. aldabranus
NHMUK 1968.43.102 ♂;
D. c. aldabranus
NHMUK 1906.12.21.143 ♀; †
D. c. abbotti
NHMUK 1906.12.21.140 ♂; †
D. c. abbotti
NHMUK 1906.12.21.141 ♀.
La Roque (in
Lougnon 1992: 209
) in 1708, while on the Plaine des Cafres, gave the only details about the nesting behaviour (my translation):
One sees there [the Plaine des Cafres] a great numbers of oiseaux bleus which nest amongst grasses and aquatic ferns.
Hébert, in 1708 (1940: 50–51), wrote a report for the East
India
Company and stated (my translation):
There are also oiseaux bleus, because their plumage is of a dark blue. They do not have another name. They are as large as hens and are good to eat.
Le Gentil (1727)
in 1717 and ‘Père Brown’ (1773) around 1730, gave the last unequivocal reports of the oiseaux bleu (
Cheke & Hume 2008
). They referred to it as resembling a wood pigeon, which may have been in comparison with the extinct, but undescribed
Réunion
Blue Pigeon
Alectroenas
sp., which was also almost all blue (
Hume
et al
. 2006
;
Hume 2011a
, 2017) (translation from
Cheke & Hume 2008: 128
):
Towards the east of the island there is a little plateau up a high mountain called the Plaine des Cafres where one finds a large blue bird whose colour is very striking. It resembles a wood-pigeon [in colouration]. It flies but rarely and always barely above the ground, but it walks with surprising speed. The inhabitants have never called it anything other than oiseau bleu; its flesh is quite good and keeps well.
An anonymous account from 1763 (Anon 1763), but possibly written by Brigadier-General Richard Smith (
Hill 1916
), may have made the last mention of the
Réunion
Gallinule, but the writer provides no description of the bird. A number of Mascarene birds were considered tame and without fear of humans; therefore the description cannot be considered unequivocal. The account was further elaborated by
Grant (1801)
, where it appears under ‘Observations on the Isle of Bourbon, in 1763, by an officer in the British Navy’, and includes an insightful contemporary description of the Plaine des Cafres, the prime habitat of the gallinule (from
Grant 1801: 167
):
The plain des Caffres, is formed by the summits of mountains at a very considerable elevation above the sea: it is said to be twenty miles in extent, and is very flat, and without stones. The access to it is very difficult in certain places, though it may be ascended on horseback. The air is very pure, but as cold as winter’s day in
England
. When the clouds pass over the surface of the plain, they have all the effect of a gentle rain. A brook runs through the middle of it, which is broad but shallow, has a sandy bottom, and freezes in the winter….On this elevated plain there are small trees, with a broom, furze, a kind of wild oat, and fern, which grows to the height of a shrub. There are also some curious birds, which never descend to the sea-side, and who are so little accustomed to, or alarmed at, the sight of man, that they suffer themselves to be killed by the stroke of a walking stick. It often rains on the sides of the mountains, while this predominating plain is enlivened with the finest weather.
The
Réunion
Gallinule questionably survived until at least 1763 (Anon 1763;
Grant 1801
), long after many of the other
Réunion
birds had become extinct. This was almost certainly due to the remoteness of its habitat (see Feuilley 1705). Its extinction was due primarily to over-hunting, but cats, introduced at the end of the 17th century (
Cheke & Hume 2008
), would have quickly eliminated the birds once they had turned feral and reached the remote montane areas. Feral cats occur all over
Réunion
today, including the remotest, highest peaks, and are still serious predators of native montane birds, especially breeding Barau’s Petrel
Pterodroma baraui
Jouanin, 1963
(
Faulquier
et al
. 2009
).