Data from: Moa diet fits the bill: virtual reconstruction incorporating mummified remains and prediction of biomechanical performance in avian giants
Data files
Dec 10, 2015 version files 675.75 MB
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Anomalopteryx didiformis_NMNZ S35274_skull 3D PDF.zip
54.64 MB
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Anomalopteryx didiformis_NMNZ S35274_skull_nastran.zip
55.83 MB
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Casuarius casuarius_CMAv14294_skull 3D PDF.zip
32.41 MB
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Casuarius casuarius_CMAv14294_skull_nastran.zip
45.22 MB
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Dinornis robustus_NMNZ S28225_skull 3D PDF.zip
69.07 MB
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Dinornis robustus_NMNZ S28225_skull_nastran.zip
58.29 MB
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Dromaius novaehollandiae_SAM B6863_skull 3D PDF.zip
25.03 MB
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Dromaius novaehollandiae_SAM B6863_skull_nastran.zip
40.50 MB
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Euryapteryx curtus_NMNZ S30212_skull 3D PDF.zip
48.93 MB
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Euryapteryx curtus_NMNZ S30212_skull_nastran.zip
54.89 MB
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Megalapteryx didinus_NMNZ S28206_skull 3D PDF.zip
28.18 MB
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Megalapteryx didinus_NMNZ S28206_skull_nastran.zip
49.18 MB
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Pachyornis australis_NMNZ S27896_skull 3D PDF.zip
54.05 MB
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Pachyornis australis_NMNZ S27896_skull_nastran.zip
59.53 MB
Abstract
The moa (Dinornithiformes) are large to gigantic extinct terrestrial birds of New Zealand. Knowledge about niche partitioning, feeding mode and preference among moa species is limited, hampering palaeoecological reconstruction and evaluation of the impacts of their extinction on remnant native biota, or the viability of exotic species as proposed ecological ‘surrogates'. Here we apply three-dimensional finite-element analysis to compare the biomechanical performance of skulls from five of the six moa genera, and two extant ratites, to predict the range of moa feeding behaviours relative to each other and to living relatives. Mechanical performance during biting was compared using simulations of the birds clipping twigs based on muscle reconstruction of mummified moa remains. Other simulated food acquisition strategies included lateral shaking, pullback and dorsoventral movement of the skull. We found evidence for limited overlap in biomechanical performance between the extant emu (Dromaius novaehollandiae) and extinct upland moa (Megalapteryx didinus) based on similarities in mandibular stress distribution in two loading cases, but overall our findings suggest that moa species exploited their habitats in different ways, relative to both each other and extant ratites. The broad range of feeding strategies used by moa, as inferred from interspecific differences in biomechanical performance of the skull, provides insight into mechanisms that facilitated high diversities of these avian herbivores in prehistoric New Zealand.
- Attard, Marie R. G. et al. (2016), Moa diet fits the bill: virtual reconstruction incorporating mummified remains and prediction of biomechanical performance in avian giants, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, Article-journal, https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.2043
