Includes bibliographical references.1. Introduction -- 2. Literature review -- 3. Methodology -- 4. Results -- 5. Discussion -- Conclusions -- References -- Appendix.The moa (Aves: Dinornithiformes) are an extinct group of ratite birds endemic to New Zealand. They were the dominant herbivores prior to human arrival. Analysis of coprolite data showed that moa diet varied little between species in the same area, despite each one being inhabited by three or more moa species. Many hypotheses have been proposed to explain how moa utilised niche partitioning. I aimed to test for evidence of character displacement in body size, which would influence feeding height among other ecologically significant factors. Moa were morphologically diverse in bo...
The human colonisation of New Zealand in the late thirteenth century AD led to catastrophic impacts ...
Despite our intuition, birds are no smaller than mammals when the constraints of a flying body plan ...
Prior to human settlement 700 years ago New Zealand had no terrestrial mammals—apart from three spec...
The moa (Dinornithiformes) are large to gigantic extinct terrestrial birds of New Zealand. Knowledge...
The moa (Dinornithiformes) are large to gigantic extinct terrestrial birds of New Zealand. Knowledge...
© 2003 Nature Publishing GroupThe ratite moa (Aves; Dinornithiformes) were massive graviportal brows...
The ratite moa(Aves; Dinornithiformes) were massive graviportal browsers weighing up to 250 kg (ref....
The extinct moa of New Zealand included three families (Megalapterygidae; Dinornithidae; Emeidae) of...
The nine currently recognized species of moa (Order – Dinornithiformes; Bonaparte 1853) suffered ext...
The nine currently recognized species of moa (Order – Dinornithiformes; Bonaparte 1853) suffered ext...
This study is an archaeological examination of the prehistoric hunting of moa, a family (Dinornithid...
This study is an archaeological examination of the prehistoric hunting of moa, a family (Dinornithid...
The iconic moa (Aves: Dinornithiformes) from New Zealand continue to attract much scientific scrutin...
Cope's rule, the tendency towards evolutionary increases in body size, is a long-standing macroevolu...
The extinct, flightless moa of New Zealand included some of the largest birds to have existed and po...
The human colonisation of New Zealand in the late thirteenth century AD led to catastrophic impacts ...
Despite our intuition, birds are no smaller than mammals when the constraints of a flying body plan ...
Prior to human settlement 700 years ago New Zealand had no terrestrial mammals—apart from three spec...
The moa (Dinornithiformes) are large to gigantic extinct terrestrial birds of New Zealand. Knowledge...
The moa (Dinornithiformes) are large to gigantic extinct terrestrial birds of New Zealand. Knowledge...
© 2003 Nature Publishing GroupThe ratite moa (Aves; Dinornithiformes) were massive graviportal brows...
The ratite moa(Aves; Dinornithiformes) were massive graviportal browsers weighing up to 250 kg (ref....
The extinct moa of New Zealand included three families (Megalapterygidae; Dinornithidae; Emeidae) of...
The nine currently recognized species of moa (Order – Dinornithiformes; Bonaparte 1853) suffered ext...
The nine currently recognized species of moa (Order – Dinornithiformes; Bonaparte 1853) suffered ext...
This study is an archaeological examination of the prehistoric hunting of moa, a family (Dinornithid...
This study is an archaeological examination of the prehistoric hunting of moa, a family (Dinornithid...
The iconic moa (Aves: Dinornithiformes) from New Zealand continue to attract much scientific scrutin...
Cope's rule, the tendency towards evolutionary increases in body size, is a long-standing macroevolu...
The extinct, flightless moa of New Zealand included some of the largest birds to have existed and po...
The human colonisation of New Zealand in the late thirteenth century AD led to catastrophic impacts ...
Despite our intuition, birds are no smaller than mammals when the constraints of a flying body plan ...
Prior to human settlement 700 years ago New Zealand had no terrestrial mammals—apart from three spec...