"Extinct" Booby Not So Extinct, Only Wearing Mask for Disguise
by Jaymi Heimbuch, San Francisco, California
on 08.12.09

Photo via sly06
It's always good news to find out that an extinct species is actually still hanging around. That's just the case with the booby. Turns out, a species once thought extinct is actually still living - it's simply been wearing a mask and going under a different name. Tricky, tricky.
National Geographic reports that Masked boobies are actually Tasman boobies, a species thought to be extinct for centuries. Recently researchers cleared up a misunderstanding thanks to DNA and fossil research.
The Tasman booby was easy prey for humans, and from Polynesian sailors to European sailors, it was eaten into extinction. Or so we thought. Turns out, a close relative of the Tasman booby - the Masked booby - is actually the very same bird.
The double-naming came about, Steeves said, "because paleontologists and biologists in recent decades did not communicate." The fossil experts unknowingly compared ancient bones of female Tasman boobies to those of male "masked boobies." Unaware that Tasman booby females are markedly smaller than males, the paleontologists assumed they were looking at two species.
Now if that isn't a happy ending. One last positive note - this species isn't even close to being extinct. In fact, it ranks as "least concern" in the IUCN rankings. Congrats, Masked booby, on a witness protection program success story.
More on Bird Species
Record Numbers of Bird Species Threatened with Extinction in IUCN Red List Update
New Bird Species Confirmed from Living Specimens Later Released
New Song Bird Discovered, With A Face You'll Never Forget
Cuckoo Added to List of Threatened Birds in UK
Thirsty for more? Check out these related articles:
- Meet Ann Snook, The Nature Conservancy's Maya Forest Program Manager
- Ed Begley, Jr. Tackles Eco-Friendly Privacy Fences, Inexpensive Hot Water Heaters, and More
- Natural Neighbors: 9 Toad-ally Awesome Ways to Welcome Wildlife Into Your Backyard Sanctuary
- Invasive Species: When Small Creatures Do Big Damage
- Which 10 Countries Have the Most Endangered Species?
- Focus on Focus Earth: The Endangered American Prairie Makes Environmentalists Out of Ranchers

































Comments ()




