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Ratites

Webpages concerning "Ratites"

This publication discusses ratite production as an alternative livestock enterprise, and goes into many of the issues a beginning producer needs to consider. It also lists ratite-related associations, websites, magazines, and books.
http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/ratite.html
Keywords:
Livestock, Ratite, ostrich, emu, rhea, cassowary, kiwi, exotic, production, pasturing, marketing, ostriches, emus, rheas

http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/ratite.html

This NebGuide acquaints the ratite grower with management techniques that can help reduce the likelihood of disease introduction and spread on the farm.
http://ianrpubs.unl.edu/animalDisease/g1206.htm
Keywords:
ratite grower, ratite, ostrich, emu, animal disease, birds, avian disease, disease prevention, management, University of Nebraska, Cooperative Extension, publications, Nebraska Cooperative Extension

http://ianrpubs.unl.edu/animalDisease/g1206.htm

http://www.nal.usda.gov/afsic/AFSIC_pubs/srb9706.htm

http://www.nal.usda.gov/afsic/AFSIC_pubs/srb9706.htm

http://duke.usask.ca/~ladd/ratalt.htm

http://duke.usask.ca/~ladd/ratalt.htm

http://www.ext.vt.edu/pubs/poultry/factsheets/7.html

http://www.ext.vt.edu/pubs/poultry/factsheets/7.html

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Wikipedia-Article "Ratites"

Ratites
Emu
Emu
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Struthioniformes
Latham, 1790
Families

Struthionidae
Casuariidae
Dinornithidae
Apterygidae
Rheidae

A ratite is any of a diverse group of large, flightless birds of Gondwanian origin, most of them now extinct. All species still in existence belong to the order Struthioniformes; some extinct species belong to Struthioniformes, while some belong to Aepyornithiformes. Unlike other flightless birds, the ratites have no keel on their sternum and, lacking a strong anchor for their wing muscles, could not fly even were they to develop suitable wings.

Most parts of the former Gondwana have ratites, or have had until the fairly recent past.

Contents

Living species

  • The African Ostrich is the largest living ratite. A large member of this species can be 3 m tall, weigh 135 kg, and outrun a horse.
  • Of the living species, the Australian emu is next in size, reaching up to 2 m tall and about 60 kg. Like the ostrich, it is a fast-running, powerful bird of the open plains and woodlands.
  • Also native to Australia and the islands to the north, are the three species of cassowary. Shorter than an emu and very solidly built, cassowaries prefer thickly vegetated tropical forest. They can be very dangerous when surprised or cornered. In New Guinea, cassowary eggs are brought back to villages and the chicks raised for eating as a much-prized delicacy, despite (or perhaps because of) the risk they pose to life and limb.
  • The smallest ratites are the six species of kiwi from New Zealand. Kiwi are chicken-sized, shy, and stroppy. They nest in deep burrows and use a highly developed sense of smell to find small insects and grubs in the soil. Kiwi are notable for laying eggs that are very large in relation to their body size. A kiwi egg may equal 15 to 20 percent of the body mass of a female kiwi.
  • South America has two species of rhea, mid-sized, fast-running birds of the pampas. The larger American rhea grows to about 1.5 m tall and weighs 20 to 25 kg. (South America also has 73 species of the small and ground-dwelling but not flightless tinamou family, which is distantly related to the ratite group.)

Extinct species

  • Aepyornis, the "elephant bird" of Madagascar, was the largest bird ever known. Although shorter than the tallest moa, a large aepyornis could weigh 450 kg. There were two species when humans arrived from Borneo and Africa, probably in the 1st century CE. Both seem to have survived for a time: the smaller Aepyornis mullerornis probably disappearing first, the giant Aepyornis maximus may have existed until as late as 1600.
  • The extensive moa family of New Zealand had ten different species until humans began arriving in numbers at about 1300 CE. Like the cassowaries, moa were mostly forest-dwellers without any mammalian predators. They are believed to have been brought to extinction by hunting within a few hundred years of human settlement. However, some believe small populations may have survived in isolated regions until more recent times.

Evolution

The traditional account of ratite evolution has the order emerging in Gondwana in cretaceous times, then evolving in their separate directions as the continents drifted apart. Cladistic evidence for this is strong: ratites share too many features for their current forms to be easily explained by convergent evolution. However, recent analysis of genetic variations between the ratites conflict with this: DNA analysis appears to show that the ratites diverged from one another too recently to share a common Gondwanian ancestor, and suggest that the kiwis are more closely related to the cassowaries than the moa. At present there is no generally accepted explanation. Research continues.

Fictional species

The Chocobo from the Final Fantasy series of video games is a fictional ratite.

External links

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