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Dodo

The dodo (Raphus cucullatus) is an extinct flightless bird that was endemic to the island of Mauritius, which is east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean. The dodo's closest relative was the also-extinct and flightless Rodrigues solitaire. The two formed the subfamily Raphinae, a clade of extinct flightless birds that were a part of the family which includes pigeons and doves. The closest living relative of the dodo is the Nicobar pigeon. A white dodo was once thought to have existed on the nearby island of Réunion, but it is now believed that this assumption was merely confusion based on the also-extinct Réunion ibis and paintings of white dodos.

Dodo
Temporal range: Holocene
Dodo skeleton cast (left) and model based on modern research (right), at Oxford University Museum of Natural History

Extinct (1662) (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Columbiformes
Family: Columbidae
Subfamily: Raphinae
Genus: Raphus
Brisson, 1760
Species:
R. cucullatus
Binomial name
Raphus cucullatus
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Location of Mauritius (in blue)
Synonyms
  • Struthio cucullatus Linnaeus, 1758
  • Didus ineptus Linnaeus, 1766

Subfossil remains show the dodo measured around 62.6–75 centimetres (2.05–2.46 ft) in height and may have weighed 10.6–17.5 kg (23–39 lb) in the wild. The dodo's appearance in life is evidenced only by drawings, paintings, and written accounts from the 17th century. Since these portraits vary considerably, and since only some of the illustrations are known to have been drawn from live specimens, the dodos' exact appearance in life remains unresolved, and little is known about its behaviour. It has been depicted with brownish-grey plumage, yellow feet, a tuft of tail feathers, a grey, naked head, and a black, yellow, and green beak. It used gizzard stones to help digest its food, which is thought to have included fruits, and its main habitat is believed to have been the woods in the drier coastal areas of Mauritius. One account states its clutch consisted of a single egg. It is presumed that the dodo became flightless because of the ready availability of abundant food sources and a relative absence of predators on Mauritius. Though the dodo has historically been portrayed as being fat and clumsy, it is now thought to have been well-adapted for its ecosystem.

The first recorded mention of the dodo was by Dutch sailors in 1598. In the following years, the bird was hunted by sailors and invasive species, while its habitat was being destroyed. The last widely accepted sighting of a dodo was in 1662. Its extinction was not immediately noticed, and some considered the bird to be a myth. In the 19th century, research was conducted on a small quantity of remains of four specimens that had been brought to Europe in the early 17th century. Among these is a dried head, the only soft tissue of the dodo that remains today. Since then, a large amount of subfossil material has been collected on Mauritius, mostly from the Mare aux Songes swamp. The extinction of the dodo within less than a century of its discovery called attention to the previously unrecognised problem of human involvement in the disappearance of entire species. The dodo achieved widespread recognition from its role in the story of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and it has since become a fixture in popular culture, often as a symbol of extinction and obsolescence.

Taxonomy

 
 
Skull in the Zoological Museum of Copenhagen (above), and right half of the Oxford specimen's head (below); examination of these led to the dodo being classified as a pigeon in the 1840s

The dodo was variously declared a small ostrich, a rail, an albatross, or a vulture, by early scientists.[2] In 1842, Danish zoologist Johannes Theodor Reinhardt proposed that dodos were ground pigeons, based on studies of a dodo skull he had discovered in the collection of the Natural History Museum of Denmark. This view was met with ridicule, but was later supported by English naturalists Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alexander Gordon Melville in their 1848 monograph The Dodo and Its Kindred, which attempted to separate myth from reality.[3][4] After dissecting the preserved head and foot of the specimen at the Oxford University Museum and comparing it with the few remains then available of the extinct Rodrigues solitaire (Pezophaps solitaria) they concluded that the two were closely related. Strickland stated that although not identical, these birds shared many distinguishing features of the leg bones, otherwise known only in pigeons.[5]

Strickland and Melville established that the dodo was anatomically similar to pigeons in many features. They pointed to the very short keratinous portion of the beak, with its long, slender, naked basal part. Other pigeons also have bare skin around their eyes, almost reaching their beak, as in dodos. The forehead was high in relation to the beak, and the nostril was located low on the middle of the beak and surrounded by skin, a combination of features shared only with pigeons. The legs of the dodo were generally more similar to those of terrestrial pigeons than of other birds, both in their scales and in their skeletal features. Depictions of the large crop hinted at a relationship with pigeons, in which this feature is more developed than in other birds. Pigeons generally have very small clutches, and the dodo is said to have laid a single egg. Like pigeons, the dodo lacked the vomer and septum of the nostrils, and it shared details in the mandible, the zygomatic bone, the palate, and the hallux. The dodo differed from other pigeons mainly in the small size of the wings and the large size of the beak in proportion to the rest of the cranium.[5]

Throughout the 19th century, several species were classified as congeneric with the dodo, including the Rodrigues solitaire and the Réunion solitaire, as Didus solitarius and Raphus solitarius, respectively (Didus and Raphus being names for the dodo genus used by different authors of the time). An atypical 17th-century description of a dodo and bones found on Rodrigues, now known to have belonged to the Rodrigues solitaire, led Abraham Dee Bartlett to name a new species, Didus nazarenus, in 1852.[6] Based on solitaire remains, it is now a synonym of that species.[7] Crude drawings of the red rail of Mauritius were also misinterpreted as dodo species; Didus broeckii and Didus herberti.[8]

For many years the dodo and the Rodrigues solitaire were placed in a family of their own, the Raphidae (formerly Dididae), because their exact relationships with other pigeons were unresolved. Each was also placed in its own monotypic family (Raphidae and Pezophapidae, respectively), as it was thought that they had evolved their similarities independently.[9] Osteological and DNA analysis has since led to the dissolution of the family Raphidae, and the dodo and solitaire are now placed in their own subfamily, Raphinae, within the family Columbidae.[10]

Evolution

 
The Nicobar pigeon is the closest living relative of the dodo

In 2002, American geneticist Beth Shapiro and colleagues analysed the DNA of the dodo for the first time. Comparison of mitochondrial cytochrome b and 12S rRNA sequences isolated from a tarsal of the Oxford specimen and a femur of a Rodrigues solitaire confirmed their close relationship and their placement within the Columbidae. The genetic evidence was interpreted as showing the Southeast Asian Nicobar pigeon (Caloenas nicobarica) to be their closest living relative, followed by the crowned pigeons (Goura) of New Guinea, and the superficially dodo-like tooth-billed pigeon (Didunculus strigirostris) from Samoa (its scientific name refers to its dodo-like beak). This clade consists of generally ground-dwelling island endemic pigeons. The following cladogram shows the dodo's closest relationships within the Columbidae, based on Shapiro and colleagues, 2002:[11][12]

Goura victoria (Victoria crowned pigeon)

Caloenas nicobarica (Nicobar pigeon)

Pezophaps solitaria (Rodrigues solitaire)

Raphus cucullatus (dodo)

Didunculus strigirostris (tooth-billed pigeon)

 
1848 lithograph of the Oxford specimen's foot, which has been used to sample DNA for genetic analyses

A similar cladogram was published in 2007, inverting the placement of Goura and Didunculus and including the pheasant pigeon (Otidiphaps nobilis) and the thick-billed ground pigeon (Trugon terrestris) at the base of the clade.[13] The DNA used in these studies was obtained from the Oxford specimen, and since this material is degraded, and no usable DNA has been extracted from subfossil remains, these findings still need to be independently verified.[14] Based on behavioural and morphological evidence, Jolyon C. Parish proposed that the dodo and Rodrigues solitaire should be placed in the subfamily Gourinae along with the Goura pigeons and others, in agreement with the genetic evidence.[15] In 2014, DNA of the only known specimen of the recently extinct spotted green pigeon (Caloenas maculata) was analysed, and it was found to be a close relative of the Nicobar pigeon, and thus also the dodo and Rodrigues solitaire.[16]

The 2002 study indicated that the ancestors of the dodo and the solitaire diverged around the Paleogene-Neogene boundary, about 23.03 million years ago. The Mascarene Islands (Mauritius, Réunion, and Rodrigues), are of volcanic origin and are less than 10 million years old. Therefore, the ancestors of both birds probably remained capable of flight for a considerable time after the separation of their lineage.[17] The Nicobar and spotted green pigeon were placed at the base of a lineage leading to the Raphinae, which indicates the flightless raphines had ancestors that were able to fly, were semi-terrestrial, and inhabited islands. This in turn supports the hypothesis that the ancestors of those birds reached the Mascarene islands by island hopping from South Asia.[16] The lack of mammalian herbivores competing for resources on these islands allowed the solitaire and the dodo to attain very large sizes and flightlessness.[18][19] Despite its divergent skull morphology and adaptations for larger size, many features of its skeleton remained similar to those of smaller, flying pigeons.[20] Another large, flightless pigeon, the Viti Levu giant pigeon (Natunaornis gigoura), was described in 2001 from subfossil material from Fiji. It was only slightly smaller than the dodo and the solitaire, and it too is thought to have been related to the crowned pigeons.[21]

Etymology

 
1601 engraving showing Dutch activities on the shore of Mauritius and the first published depiction of a dodo on the left (2, called "Walchvoghel")

One of the original names for the dodo was the Dutch "Walghvoghel", first used in the journal of Dutch Vice Admiral Wybrand van Warwijck, who visited Mauritius during the Second Dutch Expedition to Indonesia in 1598.[22] Walghe means "tasteless", "insipid", or "sickly", and voghel means "bird". The name was translated by Jakob Friedlib into German as Walchstök or Walchvögel. The original Dutch report titled Waarachtige Beschryving was lost, but the English translation survived:[23][15]

On their left hand was a little island which they named Heemskirk Island, and the bay it selve they called Warwick Bay... Here they taried 12. daies to refresh themselues, finding in this place great quantity of foules twice as bigge as swans, which they call Walghstocks or Wallowbirdes being very good meat. But finding an abundance of pigeons & popinnayes [parrots], they disdained any more to eat those great foules calling them Wallowbirds, that is to say lothsome or fulsome birdes.[24][25]

Another account from that voyage, perhaps the first to mention the dodo, states that the Portuguese referred to them as penguins. The meaning may not have been derived from penguin (the Portuguese referred to those birds as "fotilicaios" at the time), but from pinion, a reference to the small wings.[22] The crew of the Dutch ship Gelderland referred to the bird as "Dronte" (meaning "swollen") in 1602, a name that is still used in some languages.[26] This crew also called them "griff-eendt" and "kermisgans", in reference to fowl fattened for the Kermesse festival in Amsterdam, which was held the day after they anchored on Mauritius.[27]

 
Labelled sketch from 1634 by Sir Thomas Herbert, showing a broad-billed parrot, a red rail, and a dodo

The etymology of the word dodo is unclear. Some ascribe it to the Dutch word dodoor for "sluggard", but it is more probably related to Dodaars, which means either "fat-arse" or "knot-arse", referring to the knot of feathers on the hind end.[28] The first record of the word Dodaars is in Captain Willem Van West-Zanen's journal in 1602.[29] The English writer Sir Thomas Herbert was the first to use the word dodo in print in his 1634 travelogue claiming it was referred to as such by the Portuguese, who had visited Mauritius in 1507.[27] Another Englishman, Emmanuel Altham, had used the word in a 1628 letter in which he also claimed its origin was Portuguese. The name "dodar" was introduced into English at the same time as dodo, but was only used until the 18th century.[30] As far as is known, the Portuguese never mentioned the bird. Nevertheless, some sources still state that the word dodo derives from the Portuguese word doudo (currently doido), meaning "fool" or "crazy". It has also been suggested that dodo was an onomatopoeic approximation of the bird's call, a two-note pigeon-like sound resembling "doo-doo".[31]

The Latin name cucullatus ("hooded") was first used by Juan Eusebio Nieremberg in 1635 as Cygnus cucullatus, in reference to Carolus Clusius's 1605 depiction of a dodo. In his 18th-century classic work Systema Naturae, Carl Linnaeus used cucullatus as the specific name, but combined it with the genus name Struthio (ostrich).[5] Mathurin Jacques Brisson coined the genus name Raphus (referring to the bustards) in 1760, resulting in the current name Raphus cucullatus. In 1766, Linnaeus coined the new binomial Didus ineptus (meaning "inept dodo"). This has become a synonym of the earlier name because of nomenclatural priority.[32]

Description

 
Size compared to a human

As no complete dodo specimens exist, its external appearance, such as plumage and colouration, is hard to determine.[22] Illustrations and written accounts of encounters with the dodo between its discovery and its extinction (1598–1662) are the primary evidence for its external appearance.[33] According to most representations, the dodo had greyish or brownish plumage, with lighter primary feathers and a tuft of curly light feathers high on its rear end. The head was grey and naked, the beak green, black and yellow, and the legs were stout and yellowish, with black claws.[34] A study of the few remaining feathers on the Oxford specimen head showed that they were pennaceous rather than plumaceous (downy) and most similar to those of other pigeons.[35]

Subfossil remains and remnants of the birds that were brought to Europe in the 17th century show that dodos were very large birds, measuring around 62.6–75 cm (2.05–2.46 ft) in height.[36][37] The bird was sexually dimorphic; males were larger and had proportionally longer beaks. Weight estimates have varied from study to study. In 1993, Bradley C. Livezey proposed that males would have weighed 21 kilograms (46 lb) and females 17 kilograms (37 lb).[38] Also in 1993, Andrew C. Kitchener attributed a high contemporary weight estimate and the roundness of dodos depicted in Europe to these birds having been overfed in captivity; weights in the wild were estimated to have been in the range of 10.6–17.5 kg (23–39 lb), and fattened birds could have weighed 21.7–27.8 kg (48–61 lb).[39] A 2011 estimate by Angst and colleagues gave an average weight as low as 10.2 kg (22 lb).[40] This has also been questioned, and there is still controversy over weight estimates.[41][42] A 2016 study estimated the weight at 10.6 to 14.3 kg (23 to 32 lb), based on CT scans of composite skeletons.[43] It has also been suggested that the weight depended on the season, and that individuals were fat during cool seasons, but less so during hot.[37]

Skeleton

 
1848 lithographs of the Oxford dodo's skull in multiple views

The skull of the dodo differed much from those of other pigeons, especially in being more robust, the bill having a hooked tip, and in having a short cranium compared to the jaws. The upper bill was nearly twice as long as the cranium, which was short compared to those of its closest pigeon relatives. The openings of the bony nostrils were elongated along the length of the beak, and they contained no bony septum. The cranium (excluding the beak) was wider than it was long, and the frontal bone formed a dome-shape, with the highest point above the hind part of the eye sockets. The skull sloped downwards at the back. The eye sockets occupied much of the hind part of the skull. The sclerotic rings inside the eye were formed by eleven ossicles (small bones), similar to the amount in other pigeons. The mandible was slightly curved, and each half had a single fenestra (opening), as in other pigeons.[20]

 
Skeleton of the dodo (left) and its closest relative, the Rodrigues solitaire, not to scale

The dodo had about nineteen presynsacral vertebrae (those of the neck and thorax, including three fused into a notarium), sixteen synsacral vertebrae (those of the lumbar region and sacrum), six free tail (caudal) vertebrae, and a pygostyle. The neck had well-developed areas for muscle and ligament attachment, probably to support the heavy skull and beak. On each side, it had six ribs, four of which articulated with the sternum through sternal ribs. The sternum was large, but small in relation to the body compared to those of much smaller pigeons that are able to fly. The sternum was highly pneumatic, broad, and relatively thick in cross-section. The bones of the pectoral girdle, shoulder blades, and wing bones were reduced in size compared to those of flighted pigeon, and were more gracile compared to those of the Rodrigues solitaire, but none of the individual skeletal components had disappeared. The carpometacarpus of the dodo was more robust than that of the solitaire, however. The pelvis was wider than that of the solitaire and other relatives, yet was comparable to the proportions in some smaller, flighted pigeons. Most of the leg bones were more robust than those of extant pigeons and the solitaire, but the length proportions were little different.[20]

Many of the skeletal features that distinguish the dodo and the Rodrigues solitaire, its closest relative, from other pigeons have been attributed to their flightlessness. The pelvic elements were thicker than those of flighted pigeons to support the higher weight, and the pectoral region and the small wings were paedomorphic, meaning that they were underdeveloped and retained juvenile features. The skull, trunk and pelvic limbs were peramorphic, meaning that they changed considerably with age. The dodo shared several other traits with the Rodrigues solitaire, such as features of the skull, pelvis, and sternum, as well as their large size. It differed in other aspects, such as being more robust and shorter than the solitaire, having a larger skull and beak, a rounded skull roof, and smaller orbits. The dodo's neck and legs were proportionally shorter, and it did not possess an equivalent to the knob present on the solitaire's wrists.[38]

Contemporary descriptions

 
 
Dodo among Indian birds (left), by Ustad Mansur, c. 1625; perhaps the most accurate depiction of a live dodo, and dodo head (right) by Cornelis Saftleven from 1638, probably the last original depiction of the species

Most contemporary descriptions of the dodo are found in ship's logs and journals of the Dutch East India Company vessels that docked in Mauritius when the Dutch Empire ruled the island. These records were used as guides for future voyages.[14] Few contemporary accounts are reliable, as many seem to be based on earlier accounts, and none were written by scientists.[22] One of the earliest accounts, from van Warwijck's 1598 journal, describes the bird as follows:

Blue parrots are very numerous there, as well as other birds; among which are a kind, conspicuous for their size, larger than our swans, with huge heads only half covered with skin as if clothed with a hood. These birds lack wings, in the place of which 3 or 4 blackish feathers protrude. The tail consists of a few soft incurved feathers, which are ash coloured. These we used to call 'Walghvogel', for the reason that the longer and oftener they were cooked, the less soft and more insipid eating they became. Nevertheless their belly and breast were of a pleasant flavour and easily masticated.[44]

One of the most detailed descriptions is by Herbert in A Relation of Some Yeares Travaille into Afrique and the Greater Asia from 1634:

First here only and in Dygarrois [Rodrigues] is generated the Dodo, which for shape and rareness may antagonize the Phoenix of Arabia: her body is round and fat, few weigh less than fifty pound. It is reputed more for wonder than for food, greasie stomackes may seeke after them, but to the delicate they are offensive and of no nourishment. Her visage darts forth melancholy, as sensible of Nature's injurie in framing so great a body to be guided with complementall wings, so small and impotent, that they serve only to prove her bird. The halfe of her head is naked seeming couered with a fine vaile, her bill is crooked downwards, in midst is the thrill [nostril], from which part to the end tis a light green, mixed with pale yellow tincture; her eyes are small and like to Diamonds, round and rowling; her clothing downy feathers, her train three small plumes, short and inproportionable, her legs suiting her body, her pounces sharpe, her appetite strong and greedy. Stones and iron are digested, which description will better be conceived in her representation.[45]

Contemporary depictions

 
Compilation of the Gelderland ship's journal sketches from 1601 of live and recently killed dodos, attributed to Joris Laerle

The travel journal of the Dutch ship Gelderland (1601–1603), rediscovered in the 1860s, contains the only known sketches of living or recently killed specimens drawn on Mauritius. They have been attributed to the professional artist Joris Joostensz Laerle, who also drew other now-extinct Mauritian birds, and to a second, less refined artist.[46] Apart from these sketches, it is unknown how many of the twenty or so 17th-century illustrations of the dodos were drawn from life or from stuffed specimens, which affects their reliability.[22] Since dodos are otherwise only known from limited physical remains and descriptions, contemporary artworks are important to reconstruct their appearance in life. While there has been an effort since the mid-19 century to list all historical illustrations of dodos, previously unknown depictions continue to be discovered occasionally.[47]

The traditional image of the dodo is of a very fat and clumsy bird, but this view may be exaggerated. The general opinion of scientists today is that many old European depictions were based on overfed captive birds or crudely stuffed specimens.[48] It has also been suggested that the images might show dodos with puffed feathers, as part of display behaviour.[40] The Dutch painter Roelant Savery was the most prolific and influential illustrator of the dodo, having made at least twelve depictions, often showing it in the lower corners. A famous painting of his from 1626, now called Edwards's Dodo as it was once owned by the ornithologist George Edwards, has since become the standard image of a dodo. It is housed in the Natural History Museum, London. The image shows a particularly fat bird and is the source for many other dodo illustrations.[49][50]

 
The famous Edwards's Dodo, painted by Roelant Savery in 1626

An Indian Mughal painting rediscovered in the Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, in 1955 shows a dodo along with native Indian birds.[51] It depicts a slimmer, brownish bird, and its discoverer Aleksander Iwanow and British palaeontologist Julian Hume regarded it as one of the most accurate depictions of the living dodo; the surrounding birds are clearly identifiable and depicted with appropriate colouring.[52] It is believed to be from the 17th century and has been attributed to the Mughal painter Ustad Mansur. The bird depicted probably lived in the menagerie of the Mughal Emperor Jahangir, located in Surat, where the English traveller Peter Mundy also claimed to have seen two dodos sometime between 1628 and 1633.[53][22] In 2014, another Indian illustration of a dodo was reported, but it was found to be derivative of an 1836 German illustration.[54]

All post-1638 depictions appear to be based on earlier images, around the time reports mentioning dodos became rarer. Differences in the depictions led ornithologists such as Anthonie Cornelis Oudemans and Masauji Hachisuka to speculate about sexual dimorphism, ontogenic traits, seasonal variation, and even the existence of different species, but these theories are not accepted today. Because details such as markings of the beak, the form of the tail feathers, and colouration vary from account to account, it is impossible to determine the exact morphology of these features, whether they signal age or sex, or if they even reflect reality.[55] Hume argued that the nostrils of the living dodo would have been slits, as seen in the Gelderland, Cornelis Saftleven, Savery's Crocker Art Gallery, and Mansur images. According to this claim, the gaping nostrils often seen in paintings indicate that taxidermy specimens were used as models.[22] Most depictions show that the wings were held in an extended position, unlike flighted pigeons, but similar to ratites such as the ostrich and kiwi.[20]

Behaviour and ecology

 
Modern life restoration of a slim dodo, by Julian P. Hume

Little is known of the behaviour of the dodo, as most contemporary descriptions are very brief. Based on weight estimates, it has been suggested the male could reach the age of 21, and the female 17.[38] Studies of the cantilever strength of its leg bones indicate that it could run quite fast.[39] The legs were robust and strong to support the bulk of the bird, and also made it agile and manoeuvrable in the dense, pre-human landscape. Though the wings were small, well-developed muscle scars on the bones show that they were not completely vestigial, and may have been used for display behaviour and balance; extant pigeons also use their wings for such purposes.[20] Unlike the Rodrigues solitaire, there is no evidence that the dodo used its wings in intraspecific combat. Though some dodo bones have been found with healed fractures, it had weak pectoral muscles and more reduced wings in comparison. The dodo may instead have used its large, hooked beak in territorial disputes. Since Mauritius receives more rainfall and has less seasonal variation than Rodrigues, which would have affected the availability of resources on the island, the dodo would have less reason to evolve aggressive territorial behaviour. The Rodrigues solitaire was therefore probably the more aggressive of the two.[56] In 2016, the first 3D endocast was made from the brain of the dodo; the brain-to-body-size ratio was similar to that of modern pigeons, indicating that dodos were probably equal in intelligence.[57]

 
1601 map of a bay on Mauritius; the small D on the far right side marks where dodos were found

The preferred habitat of the dodo is unknown, but old descriptions suggest that it inhabited the woods on the drier coastal areas of south and west Mauritius. This view is supported by the fact that the Mare aux Songes swamp, where most dodo remains have been excavated, is close to the sea in south-eastern Mauritius.[58] Such a limited distribution across the island could well have contributed to its extinction.[59] A 1601 map from the Gelderland journal shows a small island off the coast of Mauritius where dodos were caught. Julian Hume has suggested this island was l'île aux Benitiers in Tamarin Bay, on the west coast of Mauritius.[60][46] Subfossil bones have also been found inside caves in highland areas, indicating that it once occurred on mountains. Work at the Mare aux Songes swamp has shown that its habitat was dominated by tambalacoque and Pandanus trees and endemic palms.[37] The near-coastal placement and wetness of the Mare aux Songes led to a high diversity of plant species, whereas the surrounding areas were drier.[61]

Many endemic species of Mauritius became extinct after the arrival of humans, so the ecosystem of the island is badly damaged and hard to reconstruct. Before humans arrived, Mauritius was entirely covered in forests, but very little remains of them today, because of deforestation.[62] The surviving endemic fauna is still seriously threatened.[63] The dodo lived alongside other recently extinct Mauritian birds such as the flightless red rail, the broad-billed parrot, the Mascarene grey parakeet, the Mauritius blue pigeon, the Mauritius scops owl, the Mascarene coot, the Mauritian shelduck, the Mauritian duck, and the Mauritius night heron. Extinct Mauritian reptiles include the saddle-backed Mauritius giant tortoise, the domed Mauritius giant tortoise, the Mauritian giant skink, and the Round Island burrowing boa. The small Mauritian flying fox and the snail Tropidophora carinata lived on Mauritius and Réunion, but vanished from both islands. Some plants, such as Casearia tinifolia and the palm orchid, have also become extinct.[64]

Diet and feeding

 
Savery sketch of three dodos from c. 1626, Crocker Art Gallery

A 1631 Dutch letter (long thought lost, but rediscovered in 2017) is the only account of the dodo's diet, and also mentions that it used its beak for defence. The document uses word-play to refer to the animals described, with dodos presumably being an allegory for wealthy mayors:[65]

The mayors are superb and proud. They presented themselves with an unyielding, stern face and wide open mouth, very jaunty and audacious of gait. They did not want to budge before us; their war weapon was the mouth, with which they could bite fiercely. Their food was raw fruit; they were not dressed very well, but were rich and fat, therefore we brought many of them on board, to the contentment of us all.[65]

In addition to fallen fruits, the dodo probably subsisted on nuts, seeds, bulbs, and roots.[66] It has also been suggested that the dodo might have eaten crabs and shellfish, like their relatives the crowned pigeons. Its feeding habits must have been versatile, since captive specimens were probably given a wide range of food on the long sea journeys.[67] Oudemans suggested that as Mauritius has marked dry and wet seasons, the dodo probably fattened itself on ripe fruits at the end of the wet season to survive the dry season, when food was scarce; contemporary reports describe the bird's "greedy" appetite. The Mauritian ornithologist France Staub suggested in 1996 that they mainly fed on palm fruits, and he attempted to correlate the fat-cycle of the dodo with the fruiting regime of the palms.[29]

 
Dodo and its gizzard stone by Carolus Clusius from 1605, copied from an illustration in the journal of Jacob van Neck

Skeletal elements of the upper jaw appear to have been rhynchokinetic (movable in relation to each other), which must have affected its feeding behaviour. In extant birds, such as frugivorous (fruit-eating) pigeons, kinetic premaxillae help with consuming large food items. The beak also appears to have been able to withstand high force loads, which indicates a diet of hard food.[20] Examination of the brain endocast found that though the brain was similar to that of other pigeons in most respects, the dodo had a comparatively large olfactory bulb. This gave the dodo a good sense of smell, which may have aided in locating fruit and small prey.[57]

Several contemporary sources state that the dodo used Gastroliths (gizzard stones) to aid digestion. The English writer Sir Hamon L'Estrange witnessed a live bird in London and described it as follows:

About 1638, as I walked London streets, I saw the picture of a strange looking fowle hung out upon a clothe and myselfe with one or two more in company went in to see it. It was kept in a chamber, and was a great fowle somewhat bigger than the largest Turkey cock, and so legged and footed, but stouter and thicker and of more erect shape, coloured before like the breast of a young cock fesan, and on the back of a dunn or dearc colour. The keeper called it a Dodo, and in the ende of a chymney in the chamber there lay a heape of large pebble stones, whereof hee gave it many in our sight, some as big as nutmegs, and the keeper told us that she eats them (conducing to digestion), and though I remember not how far the keeper was questioned therein, yet I am confident that afterwards she cast them all again.[68]

It is not known how the young were fed, but related pigeons provide crop milk. Contemporary depictions show a large crop, which was probably used to add space for food storage and to produce crop milk. It has been suggested that the maximum size attained by the dodo and the solitaire was limited by the amount of crop milk they could produce for their young during early growth.[69]

In 1973, the tambalacoque, also known as the dodo tree, was thought to be dying out on Mauritius, to which it is endemic. There were supposedly only 13 specimens left, all estimated to be about 300 years old. Stanley Temple hypothesised that it depended on the dodo for its propagation, and that its seeds would germinate only after passing through the bird's digestive tract. He claimed that the tambalacoque was now nearly coextinct because of the disappearance of the dodo.[70] Temple overlooked reports from the 1940s that found that tambalacoque seeds germinated, albeit very rarely, without being abraded during digestion.[71] Others have contested his hypothesis and suggested that the decline of the tree was exaggerated or seeds were also distributed by other extinct animals such as Cylindraspis tortoises, fruit bats, or the broad-billed parrot.[72] According to Wendy Strahm and Anthony Cheke, two experts in the ecology of the Mascarene Islands, the tree, while rare, has germinated since the demise of the dodo and numbers several hundred, not 13 as claimed by Temple, hence, discrediting Temple's view as to the dodo and the tree's sole survival relationship.[73]

The Brazilian ornithologist Carlos Yamashita suggested in 1997 that the broad-billed parrot may have depended on dodos and Cylindraspis tortoises to eat palm fruits and excrete their seeds, which became food for the parrots. Anodorhynchus macaws depended on now-extinct South American megafauna in the same way, but now rely on domesticated cattle for this service.[74]

Reproduction and development

 
Replica of an alleged dodo egg in a reconstructed nest, East London Museum

As it was flightless and terrestrial and there were no mammalian predators or other kinds of natural enemy on Mauritius, the dodo probably nested on the ground.[75] The account by François Cauche from 1651 is the only description of the egg and the call:

I have seen in Mauritius birds bigger than a Swan, without feathers on the body, which is covered with a black down; the hinder part is round, the rump adorned with curled feathers as many in number as the bird is years old. In place of wings they have feathers like these last, black and curved, without webs. They have no tongues, the beak is large, curving a little downwards; their legs are long, scaly, with only three toes on each foot. It has a cry like a gosling, and is by no means so savoury to eat as the Flamingos and Ducks of which we have just spoken. They only lay one egg which is white, the size of a halfpenny roll, by the side of which they place a white stone the size of a hen's egg. They lay on grass which they collect, and make their nests in the forests; if one kills the young one, a grey stone is found in the gizzard. We call them Oiseaux de Nazaret. The fat is excellent to give ease to the muscles and nerves.[5]

 
Thin sections of hindlimb bones showing stages of the growth series
 
Diagram showing life history events of a dodo based on histology and accounts

Cauche's account is problematic, since it also mentions that the bird he was describing had three toes and no tongue, unlike dodos. This led some to believe that Cauche was describing a new species of dodo ("Didus nazarenus"). The description was most probably mingled with that of a cassowary, and Cauche's writings have other inconsistencies.[76] A mention of a "young ostrich" taken on board a ship in 1617 is the only other reference to a possible juvenile dodo.[77] An egg claimed to be that of a dodo is stored in the East London Museum in South Africa. It was donated by the South African museum official Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, whose great aunt had received it from a captain who claimed to have found it in a swamp on Mauritius. In 2010, the curator of the museum proposed using genetic studies to determine its authenticity.[78] It may instead be an aberrant ostrich egg.[31]

Because of the possible single-egg clutch and the bird's large size, it has been proposed that the dodo was K-selected, meaning that it produced few altricial offspring, which required parental care until they matured. Some evidence, including the large size and the fact that tropical and frugivorous birds have slower growth rates, indicates that the bird may have had a protracted development period.[38] The fact that no juvenile dodos have been found in the Mare aux Songes swamp may indicate that they produced little offspring, that they matured rapidly, that the breeding grounds were far away from the swamp, or that the risk of miring was seasonal.[79]

A 2017 study examined the histology of thin-sectioned dodo bones, modern Mauritian birds, local ecology, and contemporary accounts, to recover information about the life history of the dodo. The study suggested that dodos bred around August, after having potentially fattened themselves, corresponding with the fat and thin cycles of many vertebrates of Mauritius. The chicks grew rapidly, reaching robust, almost adult, sizes, and sexual maturity before Austral summer or the cyclone season. Adult dodos which had just bred moulted after Austral summer, around March. The feathers of the wings and tail were replaced first, and the moulting would have completed at the end of July, in time for the next breeding season. Different stages of moulting may also account for inconsistencies in contemporary descriptions of dodo plumage.[80]

Relationship with humans

 
1648 engraving showing the killing of dodos (centre left, erroneously depicted as penguin-like) and other animals now extinct from Mauritius

Mauritius had previously been visited by Arab vessels in the Middle Ages and Portuguese ships between 1507 and 1513, but was settled by neither. No records of dodos by these are known, although the Portuguese name for Mauritius, "Cerne (swan) Island", may have been a reference to dodos.[81] The Dutch Empire acquired Mauritius in 1598, renaming it after Maurice of Nassau, and it was used for the provisioning of trade vessels of the Dutch East India Company henceforward.[82] The earliest known accounts of the dodo were provided by Dutch travellers during the Second Dutch Expedition to Indonesia, led by admiral Jacob van Neck in 1598. They appear in reports published in 1601, which also contain the first published illustration of the bird.[83] Since the first sailors to visit Mauritius had been at sea for a long time, their interest in these large birds was mainly culinary. The 1602 journal by Willem Van West-Zanen of the ship Bruin-Vis mentions that 24–25 dodos were hunted for food, which were so large that two could scarcely be consumed at mealtime, their remains being preserved by salting.[84] An illustration made for the 1648 published version of this journal, showing the killing of dodos, a dugong, and possibly Mascarene grey parakeets, was captioned with a Dutch poem,[85] here in Hugh Strickland's 1848 translation:

For food the seamen hunt the flesh of feathered fowl,
They tap the palms, and round-rumped dodos they destroy,
The parrot's life they spare that he may peep and howl,
And thus his fellows to imprisonment decoy.[86]

Some early travellers found dodo meat unsavoury, and preferred to eat parrots and pigeons; others described it as tough, but good. Some hunted dodos only for their gizzards, as this was considered the most delicious part of the bird. Dodos were easy to catch, but hunters had to be careful not to be bitten by their powerful beaks.[87]

The appearance of the dodo and the red rail led Peter Mundy to speculate, 230 years before Charles Darwin's theory of evolution:

Of these 2 sorts off fowl afforementionede, For oughtt wee yett know, Not any to bee Found out of this Iland, which lyeth aboutt 100 leagues From St. Lawrence. A question may bee demaunded how they should bee here and Not elcewhere, beeing soe Farer From other land and can Neither fly or swymme; whither by Mixture off kindes producing straunge and Monstrous formes, or the Nature of the Climate, ayer and earth in alltring the First shapes in long tyme, or how.[26]

Dodos transported abroad

 
Painting of a possibly stuffed specimen in the collection of Emperor Rudolph II in Prague, by Jacob Hoefnagel, early 1600s
 
Adriaen van de Venne's 1626 depiction of a dodo he claimed to have seen

The dodo was found interesting enough that living specimens were sent to Europe and the East. The number of transported dodos that reached their destinations alive is uncertain, and it is unknown how they relate to contemporary depictions and the few non-fossil remains in European museums. Based on a combination of contemporary accounts, paintings, and specimens, Julian Hume has inferred that at least eleven transported dodos reached their destinations alive.[88]

Hamon L'Estrange's description of a dodo that he saw in London in 1638 is the only account that specifically mentions a live specimen in Europe. In 1626 Adriaen van de Venne drew a dodo that he claimed to have seen in Amsterdam, but he did not mention if it was alive, and his depiction is reminiscent of Savery's Edwards's Dodo. Two live specimens were seen by Peter Mundy in Surat, India, between 1628 and 1634, one of which may have been the individual painted by Mansur around 1625.[22] In 1628, Emmanuel Altham visited Mauritius and sent a letter to his brother in England:

Right wo and lovinge brother, we were ordered by ye said councell to go to an island called Mauritius, lying in 20d. of south latt., where we arrived ye 28th of May; this island having many goates, hogs and cowes upon it, and very strange fowles, called by ye portingalls Dodo, which for the rareness of the same, the like being not in ye world but here, I have sent you one by Mr. Perce, who did arrive with the ship William at this island ye 10th of June. [In the margin of the letter] Of Mr. Perce you shall receive a jarr of ginger for my sister, some beades for my cousins your daughters, and a bird called a Dodo, if it live.[89]

 
 
 
 
 
 
Savery paintings featuring dodos in various corners (one with a lobster's body, lower right), painted in Europe approximately between 1625 and 1629

Whether the dodo survived the journey is unknown, and the letter was destroyed by fire in the 19th century.[90] The earliest known picture of a dodo specimen in Europe is from a c. 1610 collection of paintings depicting animals in the royal menagerie of Emperor Rudolph II in Prague. This collection includes paintings of other Mauritian animals as well, including a red rail. The dodo, which may be a juvenile, seems to have been dried or embalmed, and had probably lived in the emperor's zoo for a while together with the other animals. That whole stuffed dodos were present in Europe indicates they had been brought alive and died there; it is unlikely that taxidermists were on board the visiting ships, and spirits were not yet used to preserve biological specimens. Most tropical specimens were preserved as dried heads and feet.[88]

One dodo was reportedly sent as far as Nagasaki, Japan, in 1647, but it was long unknown whether it arrived.[74] Contemporary documents first published in 2014 proved the story, and showed that it had arrived alive. It was meant as a gift, and, despite its rarity, was considered of equal value to a white deer and a bezoar stone. It is the last recorded live dodo in captivity.[91]

Extinction

 
Illustration of Dutch sailors pursuing dodos, by Walter Paget, 1914. Hunting by humans is not believed to have been the main cause of the bird's extinction.

Like many animals that evolved in isolation from significant predators, the dodo was entirely fearless of humans. This fearlessness and its inability to fly made the dodo easy prey for sailors.[92] Although some scattered reports describe mass killings of dodos for ships' provisions, archaeological investigations have found scant evidence of human predation. Bones of at least two dodos were found in caves at Baie du Cap that sheltered fugitive slaves and convicts in the 17th century, which would not have been easily accessible to dodos because of the high, broken terrain.[10] The human population on Mauritius (an area of 1,860 km2 or 720 sq mi) never exceeded 50 people in the 17th century, but they introduced other animals, including dogs, pigs, cats, rats, and crab-eating macaques, which plundered dodo nests and competed for the limited food resources.[37] At the same time, humans destroyed the forest habitat of the dodos. The impact of the introduced animals on the dodo population, especially the pigs and macaques, is today considered more severe than that of hunting.[93] Rats were perhaps not much of a threat to the nests, since dodos would have been used to dealing with local land crabs.[94]

It has been suggested that the dodo may already have been rare or localised before the arrival of humans on Mauritius, since it would have been unlikely to become extinct so rapidly if it had occupied all the remote areas of the island.[59] A 2005 expedition found subfossil remains of dodos and other animals killed by a flash flood. Such mass mortalities would have further jeopardised a species already in danger of becoming extinct.[95] Yet the fact that the dodo survived hundreds of years of volcanic activity and climatic changes shows the bird was resilient within its ecosystem.[61]

Some controversy surrounds the date of its extinction. The last widely accepted record of a dodo sighting is the 1662 report by shipwrecked mariner Volkert Evertsz of the Dutch ship Arnhem, who described birds caught on a small islet off Mauritius, now suggested to be Amber Island:

These animals on our coming up to them stared at us and remained quiet where they stand, not knowing whether they had wings to fly away or legs to run off, and suffering us to approach them as close as we pleased. Amongst these birds were those which in India they call Dod-aersen (being a kind of very big goose); these birds are unable to fly, and instead of wings, they merely have a few small pins, yet they can run very swiftly. We drove them together into one place in such a manner that we could catch them with our hands, and when we held one of them by its leg, and that upon this it made a great noise, the others all on a sudden came running as fast as they could to its assistance, and by which they were caught and made prisoners also.[96]

The dodos on this islet may not necessarily have been the last members of the species.[97] The last claimed sighting of a dodo was reported in the hunting records of Isaac Johannes Lamotius in 1688. A 2003 statistical analysis of these records by the biologists David L. Roberts and Andrew R. Solow gave a new estimated extinction date of 1693, with a 95% confidence interval of 1688–1715. These authors also pointed out that because the last sighting before 1662 was in 1638, the dodo was probably already quite rare by the 1660s, and thus a disputed report from 1674 by an escaped slave could not be dismissed out of hand.[98]

 
 
Pieter van den Broecke's 1617 drawing of a dodo, a one-horned sheep, and a red rail; after the dodo became extinct, visitors may have confused it with the red rail (1907 restoration of that bird at right by Frederick William Frohawk)

The British ornithologist Alfred Newton suggested in 1868 that the name of the dodo was transferred to the red rail after the former had gone extinct.[99] Cheke also pointed out that some descriptions after 1662 use the names "Dodo" and "Dodaers" when referring to the red rail, indicating that they had been transferred to it.[100] He therefore pointed to the 1662 description as the last credible observation. A 1668 account by English traveller John Marshall, who used the names "Dodo" and "Red Hen" interchangeably for the red rail, mentioned that the meat was "hard", which echoes the description of the meat in the 1681 account.[101] Even the 1662 account has been questioned by the writer Errol Fuller, as the reaction to distress cries matches what was described for the red rail.[102] Until this explanation was proposed, a description of "dodos" from 1681 was thought to be the last account, and that date still has proponents.[103]

Cheke stated in 2014 that then recently accessible Dutch manuscripts indicate that no dodos were seen by settlers in 1664–1674.[104] In 2020, Cheke and the British researcher Jolyon C. Parish suggested that all mentions of dodos after the mid-17th century instead referred to red rails, and that the dodo had disappeared due to predation by feral pigs during a hiatus in settlement of Mauritius (1658–1664). The dodo's extinction therefore was not realised at the time, since new settlers had not seen real dodos, but as they expected to see flightless birds, they referred to the red rail by that name instead. Since red rails probably had larger clutches than dodos and their eggs could be incubated faster, and their nests were perhaps concealed, they probably bred more efficiently, and were less vulnerable to pigs.[105]

It is unlikely the issue will ever be resolved, unless late reports mentioning the name alongside a physical description are rediscovered.[94] The IUCN Red List accepts Cheke's rationale for choosing the 1662 date, taking all subsequent reports to refer to red rails. In any case, the dodo was probably extinct by 1700, about a century after its discovery in 1598.[1][101] The Dutch left Mauritius in 1710, but by then the dodo and most of the large terrestrial vertebrates there had become extinct.[37]

Even though the rareness of the dodo was reported already in the 17th century, its extinction was not recognised until the 19th century. This was partly because, for religious reasons, extinction was not believed possible until later proved so by Georges Cuvier, and partly because many scientists doubted that the dodo had ever existed. It seemed altogether too strange a creature, and many believed it a myth. The bird was first used as an example of human-induced extinction in Penny Magazine in 1833,[106] and has since been referred to as an "icon" of extinction.[107]

Physical remains

17th-century specimens

 
 
Cast of the Oxford head before dissection and the lost London foot at Booth Museum, and illustration of same head

The only extant remains of dodos taken to Europe in the 17th century are a dried head and foot in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, a foot once housed in the British Museum but now lost, a skull in the University of Copenhagen Zoological Museum, and an upper jaw in the National Museum, Prague. The last two were rediscovered and identified as dodo remains in the mid-19th century.[108] Several stuffed dodos were also mentioned in old museum inventories, but none are known to have survived.[109] Apart from these remains, a dried foot, which belonged to the Dutch professor Pieter Pauw, was mentioned by Carolus Clusius in 1605. Its provenance is unknown, and it is now lost, but it may have been collected during the Van Neck voyage.[22] Supposed stuffed dodos seen in museums around the world today have in fact been made from feathers of other birds, many of the older ones by the British taxidermist Rowland Ward's company.[108]

 
 
Coloured engraving of the now lost London foot from 1793 (left), and 1848 lithograph of same in multiple views

The only known soft tissue remains, the Oxford head (specimen OUM 11605) and foot, belonged to the last known stuffed dodo, which was first mentioned as part of the Tradescant collection in 1656 and was moved to the Ashmolean Museum in 1659.[22] It has been suggested that this might be the remains of the bird that Hamon L'Estrange saw in London, the bird sent by Emanuel Altham, or a donation by Thomas Herbert. Since the remains do not show signs of having been mounted, the specimen might instead have been preserved as a study skin.[110] In 2018, it was reported that scans of the Oxford dodo's head showed that its skin and bone contained lead shot, pellets which were used to hunt birds in the 17th century. This indicates that the Oxford dodo was shot either before being transported to Britain, or some time after arriving. The circumstances of its killing are unknown, and the pellets are to be examined to identify where the lead was mined from.[111][112]

Many sources state that the Ashmolean Museum burned the stuffed dodo around 1755 because of severe decay, saving only the head and leg. Statute 8 of the museum states "That as any particular grows old and perishing the keeper may remove it into one of the closets or other repository; and some other to be substituted."[113] The deliberate destruction of the specimen is now believed to be a myth; it was removed from exhibition to preserve what remained of it. This remaining soft tissue has since degraded further; the head was dissected by Strickland and Melville, separating the skin from the skull in two-halves. The foot is in a skeletal state, with only scraps of skin and tendons. Very few feathers remain on the head. It is probably a female, as the foot is 11% smaller and more gracile than the London foot, yet appears to be fully grown.[114] The specimen was exhibited at the Oxford museum from at least the 1860s and until 1998, where-after it was mainly kept in storage to prevent damage.[115] Casts of the head can today be found in many museums worldwide.[110]

 
 
Upper jaw of a dodo in the National Museum of Prague (left) and 1855 lithograph of the specimen

The dried London foot, first mentioned in 1665, and transferred to the British Museum in the 18th century, was displayed next to Savery's Edwards's Dodo painting until the 1840s, and it too was dissected by Strickland and Melville. It was not posed in a standing posture, which suggests that it was severed from a fresh specimen, not a mounted one. By 1896 it was mentioned as being without its integuments, and only the bones are believed to remain today, though its present whereabouts are unknown.[22]

The Copenhagen skull (specimen ZMUC 90-806) is known to have been part of the collection of Bernardus Paludanus in Enkhuizen until 1651, when it was moved to the museum in Gottorf Castle, Schleswig.[116] After the castle was occupied by Danish forces in 1702, the museum collection was assimilated into the Royal Danish collection. The skull was rediscovered by J. T. Reinhardt in 1840. Based on its history, it may be the oldest known surviving remains of a dodo brought to Europe in the 17th century.[22] It is 13 mm (0.51 in) shorter than the Oxford skull, and may have belonged to a female.[38] It was mummified, but the skin has perished.[37]

The front part of a skull (specimen NMP P6V-004389) in the National Museum of Prague was found in 1850 among the remains of the Böhmisches Museum. Other elements supposedly belonging to this specimen have been listed in the literature, but it appears only the partial skull was ever present (a partial right limb in the museum appears to be from a Rodrigues solitaire).[22][117][118] It may be what remains of one of the stuffed dodos known to have been at the menagerie of Emperor Rudolph II, possibly the specimen painted by Hoefnagel or Savery there.[119]

Subfossil specimens

 
 
Richard Owen's 1866 reconstruction of the dodo's skeleton (left), based on bones found in the Mare aux Songes (it is too squat, following Savery's Edwards's Dodo painting), and his more upright mount at Natural History Museum, London

Until 1860, the only known dodo remains were the four incomplete 17th-century specimens. Philip Burnard Ayres found the first subfossil bones in 1860, which were sent to Richard Owen at the British Museum, who did not publish the findings. In 1863, Owen requested the Mauritian Bishop Vincent Ryan to spread word that he should be informed if any dodo bones were found.[2] In 1865, George Clark, the government schoolmaster at Mahébourg, finally found an abundance of subfossil dodo bones in the swamp of Mare aux Songes in Southern Mauritius, after a 30-year search inspired by Strickland and Melville's monograph.[22] In 1866, Clark explained his procedure to The Ibis, an ornithology journal: he had sent his coolies to wade through the centre of the swamp, feeling for bones with their feet. At first they found few bones, until they cut away herbage that covered the deepest part of the swamp, where they found many fossils.[120] Harry Pasley Higginson, a railway engineer from Yorkshire, reports discovering the Mare aux Songes bones at the same time as Clark and there is some dispute over who found them first. Higginson sent boxes of these bones to Liverpool, Leeds and York museums.[121][122] The swamp yielded the remains of over 300 dodos, but very few skull and wing bones, possibly because the upper bodies were washed away or scavenged while the lower body was trapped. The situation is similar to many finds of moa remains in New Zealand marshes.[123] Most dodo remains from the Mare aux Songes have a medium to dark brown colouration.[79]

Clark's reports about the finds rekindled interest in the bird. Sir Richard Owen and Alfred Newton both wanted to be first to describe the post-cranial anatomy of the dodo, and Owen bought a shipment of dodo bones originally meant for Newton, which led to rivalry between the two. Owen described the bones in Memoir on the Dodo in October 1866, but erroneously based his reconstruction on the Edwards's Dodo painting by Savery, making it too squat and obese. In 1869 he received more bones and corrected its stance, making it more upright. Newton moved his focus to the Réunion solitaire instead. The remaining bones not sold to Owen or Newton were auctioned off or donated to museums.[2][124] In 1889, Théodor Sauzier was commissioned to explore the "historical souvenirs" of Mauritius and find more dodo remains in the Mare aux Songes. He was successful, and also found remains of other extinct species.[125]

 
Skeleton assembled from subfossils found in 2006, Naturalis
 
Subfossil bones rediscovered in the Grant Museum in 2011

In 2005, after a hundred years of neglect, a part of the Mare aux Songes swamp was excavated by an international team of researchers (International Dodo Research Project). To prevent malaria, the British had covered the swamp with hard core during their rule over Mauritius, which had to be removed. Many remains were found, including bones of at least 17 dodos in various stages of maturity (though no juveniles), and several bones obviously from the skeleton of one individual bird, which have been preserved in their natural position.[126] These findings were made public in December 2005 in the Naturalis museum in Leiden. 63% of the fossils found in the swamp belonged to turtles of the extinct genus Cylindraspis, and 7.1% belonged to dodos, which had been deposited within several centuries, 4,000 years ago.[127] Subsequent excavations suggested that dodos and other animals became mired in the Mare aux Songes while trying to reach water during a long period of severe drought about 4,200 years ago.[126] Furthermore, cyanobacteria thrived in the conditions created by the excrements of animals gathered around the swamp, which died of intoxication, dehydration, trampling, and miring.[128] Though many small skeletal elements were found during the recent excavations of the swamp, few were found during the 19th century, probably owing to the employment of less refined methods when collecting.[79]

Louis Etienne Thirioux, an amateur naturalist at Port Louis, also found many dodo remains around 1900 from several locations. They included the first articulated specimen, which is the first subfossil dodo skeleton found outside the Mare aux Songes, and the only remains of a juvenile specimen, a now lost tarsometatarsus.[22][37] The former specimen was found in 1904 in a cave near Le Pouce mountain, and is the only known complete skeleton of an individual dodo. Thirioux donated the specimen to the Museum Desjardins (now Natural History Museum at Mauritius Institute).[129][130] Thrioux's heirs sold a second mounted composite skeleton (composed of at least two skeletons, with a mainly reconstructed skull) to the Durban Museum of Natural Science in South Africa in 1918. Together, these two skeletons represent the most completely known dodo remains, including bone elements previously unrecorded (such as knee-caps and wing bones). Though some contemporary writers noted the importance of Thrioux's specimens, they were not scientifically studied, and were largely forgotten until 2011, when sought out by a group of researchers. The mounted skeletons were laser scanned, from which 3-D models were reconstructed, which became the basis of a 2016 monograph about the osteology of the dodo.[131][132] In 2006, explorers discovered a complete skeleton of a dodo in a lava cave in Mauritius. This was only the second associated skeleton of an individual specimen ever found, and the only one in recent times.[133]

Worldwide, 26 museums have significant holdings of dodo material, almost all found in the Mare aux Songes. The Natural History Museum, American Museum of Natural History, Cambridge University Museum of Zoology, the Senckenberg Museum, and others have almost complete skeletons, assembled from the dissociated subfossil remains of several individuals.[134] In 2011, a wooden box containing dodo bones from the Edwardian era was rediscovered at the Grant Museum at University College London during preparations for a move. They had been stored with crocodile bones until then.[135]

White dodo

 
Savery's Landscape with Orpheus and the animals showing a whitish dodo in the lower right, 1611 or later
 
One of Pieter Holsteyn II's mid-17th-century paintings of a white dodo, possibly based on Savery's image

The supposed "white dodo" (or "solitaire") of Réunion is now considered an erroneous conjecture based on contemporary reports of the Réunion ibis and 17th-century paintings of white, dodo-like birds by Pieter Withoos and Pieter Holsteyn that surfaced in the 19th century. The confusion began when Willem Ysbrandtszoon Bontekoe, who visited Réunion around 1619, mentioned fat, flightless birds that he referred to as "Dod-eersen" in his journal, though without mentioning their colouration. When the journal was published in 1646, it was accompanied by an engraving of a dodo from Savery's "Crocker Art Gallery sketch".[136] A white, stocky, and flightless bird was first mentioned as part of the Réunion fauna by Chief Officer J. Tatton in 1625. Sporadic mentions were subsequently made by Sieur Dubois and other contemporary writers.[137]

Baron Edmond de Sélys Longchamps coined the name Raphus solitarius for these birds in 1848, as he believed the accounts referred to a species of dodo. When 17th-century paintings of white dodos were discovered by 19th-century naturalists, it was assumed they depicted these birds. Oudemans suggested that the discrepancy between the paintings and the old descriptions was that the paintings showed females, and that the species was therefore sexually dimorphic.[138] Some authors also believed the birds described were of a species similar to the Rodrigues solitaire, as it was referred to by the same name, or even that there were white species of both dodo and solitaire on the island.[139]

The Pieter Withoos painting, which was discovered first, appears to be based on an earlier painting by Pieter Holsteyn, three versions of which are known to have existed. According to Hume, Cheke, and Valledor de Lozoya, it appears that all depictions of white dodos were based on Roelant Savery's painting Landscape with Orpheus and the animals, or on copies of it. The painting has generally been dated to 1611, though a post-1614, or even post-1626, date has also been proposed. The painting shows a whitish specimen and was apparently based on a stuffed specimen then in Prague; a walghvogel described as having a "dirty off-white colouring" was mentioned in an inventory of specimens in the Prague collection of the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, to whom Savery was contracted at the time (1607–1611). Savery's several later images all show greyish birds, possibly because he had by then seen another specimen. Cheke and Hume believe the painted specimen was white, owing to albinism.[119][50] Valledor de Lozoya has instead suggested that the light plumage was a juvenile trait, a result of bleaching of old taxidermy specimens, or simply artistic license.[140]

In 1987, scientists described fossils of a recently extinct species of ibis from Réunion with a relatively short beak, Borbonibis latipes, before a connection to the solitaire reports had been made.[141] Cheke suggested to one of the authors, Francois Moutou, that the fossils may have been of the Réunion solitaire, and this suggestion was published in 1995. The ibis was reassigned to the genus Threskiornis, now combined with the specific epithet solitarius from the binomial R. solitarius.[142] Birds of this genus are also white and black with slender beaks, fitting the old descriptions of the Réunion solitaire. No fossil remains of dodo-like birds have ever been found on the island.[119]

Cultural significance

 
 
Illustrations of Alice and the Dodo from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, by John Tenniel (left, 1865) and Arthur Rackham (1907)

The dodo's significance as one of the best-known extinct animals and its singular appearance led to its use in literature and popular culture as a symbol of an outdated concept or object, as in the expression "dead as a dodo," which has come to mean unquestionably dead or obsolete. Similarly, the phrase "to go the way of the dodo" means to become extinct or obsolete, to fall out of common usage or practice, or to become a thing of the past.[143] "Dodo" is also a slang term for a stupid, dull-witted person, as it was said to be stupid and easily caught.[144][145]

The dodo appears frequently in works of popular fiction, and even before its extinction, it was featured in European literature, as a symbol for exotic lands, and of gluttony, due to its apparent fatness.[146] In 1865, the same year that George Clark started to publish reports about excavated dodo fossils, the newly vindicated bird was featured as a character in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. It is thought that he included the dodo because he identified with it and had adopted the name as a nickname for himself because of his stammer, which made him accidentally introduce himself as "Do-do-dodgson", his legal surname.[107] Carroll and the girl who served as inspiration for Alice, Alice Liddell, had enjoyed visiting the Oxford museum to see the dodo remains there.[147] The book's popularity made the dodo a well-known icon of extinction.[148] Popular depictions of the dodo often became more exaggerated and cartoonish following its Alice in Wonderland fame, which was in line with the inaccurate belief that it was clumsy, tragic, and destined for extinction.[149]

 
 
Dodo on a 1971 Mauritius 10 Rupee

The dodo is used as a mascot for many kinds of products, especially in Mauritius.[150] It appears as a supporter on the coat of arms of Mauritius, on Mauritius coins, is used as a watermark on all Mauritian rupee banknotes, and features as the background of the Mauritian immigration form.[93][151][152] A smiling dodo is the symbol of the Brasseries de Bourbon, a popular brewer on Réunion, whose emblem displays the white species once thought to have lived there.[153]

The dodo is used to promote the protection of endangered species by environmental organisations, such as the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust and the Durrell Wildlife Park.[154] The Center for Biological Diversity gives an annual 'Rubber Dodo Award', to "those who have done the most to destroy wild places, species and biological diversity".[155] In 2011, the nephiline spider Nephilengys dodo, which inhabits the same woods as the dodo once did, was named after the bird to raise awareness of the urgent need for protection of the Mauritius biota.[156] Two species of ant from Mauritius have been named after the dodo: Pseudolasius dodo in 1946 and Pheidole dodo in 2013.[157][158] A species of isopod from a coral reef off Réunion was named Hansenium dodo in 1991.[159]

The name dodo has been used by scientists naming genetic elements, honouring the dodo's flightless nature. A fruitfly gene within a region of a chromosome required for flying ability was named "dodo".[160] In addition, a defective transposable element family from Phytophthora infestans was named DodoPi as it contained mutations that eliminated the element's ability to jump to new locations in a chromosome.[161]

 
 
Previously unpublished 17th-century illustration of a dodo sold in 2009 (left) and 19th century rogue taxidermy dodos by Rowland Ward in NHM (right)

In 2009, a previously unpublished 17th-century Dutch illustration of a dodo went for sale at Christie's and was expected to sell for £6,000.[162] It is unknown whether the illustration was based on a specimen or on a previous image, and the artist is unidentified. It sold for £44,450.[163][47] Parrish suggested it depicts a stuffed specimen, as the legs look dried.[164]

The poet Hilaire Belloc included the following poem about the dodo in his Bad Child's Book of Beasts from 1896:

The Dodo used to walk around,
And take the sun and air.
The sun yet warms his native ground –
The Dodo is not there!

The voice which used to squawk and squeak
Is now for ever dumb –
Yet may you see his bones and beak
All in the Mu-se-um.[165][147]

See also

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Bibliography

  • Parish, Jolyon C. (2013). The Dodo and the Solitaire: A Natural History. Bloomington (US): Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-00099-6.

External links

  • Painting the Dodo: Two-minute video about Julian Hume's modern interpretation of Roelant Savery's Dodo
  • Dodo Bird Unboxing: Seven-minute video showing the Oxford specimen being taken out of storage and discussed
  • Aves3D – Raphus cucullatus 13 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine: Interactive 3D scans of various dodo elements

dodo, other, uses, disambiguation, dodo, raphus, cucullatus, extinct, flightless, bird, that, endemic, island, mauritius, which, east, madagascar, indian, ocean, dodo, closest, relative, also, extinct, flightless, rodrigues, solitaire, formed, subfamily, raphi. For other uses see Dodo disambiguation The dodo Raphus cucullatus is an extinct flightless bird that was endemic to the island of Mauritius which is east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean The dodo s closest relative was the also extinct and flightless Rodrigues solitaire The two formed the subfamily Raphinae a clade of extinct flightless birds that were a part of the family which includes pigeons and doves The closest living relative of the dodo is the Nicobar pigeon A white dodo was once thought to have existed on the nearby island of Reunion but it is now believed that this assumption was merely confusion based on the also extinct Reunion ibis and paintings of white dodos DodoTemporal range HoloceneDodo skeleton cast left and model based on modern research right at Oxford University Museum of Natural HistoryConservation statusExtinct 1662 IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder ColumbiformesFamily ColumbidaeSubfamily RaphinaeGenus RaphusBrisson 1760Species R cucullatusBinomial name Raphus cucullatus Linnaeus 1758 Location of Mauritius in blue SynonymsStruthio cucullatus Linnaeus 1758 Didus ineptus Linnaeus 1766Subfossil remains show the dodo measured around 62 6 75 centimetres 2 05 2 46 ft in height and may have weighed 10 6 17 5 kg 23 39 lb in the wild The dodo s appearance in life is evidenced only by drawings paintings and written accounts from the 17th century Since these portraits vary considerably and since only some of the illustrations are known to have been drawn from live specimens the dodos exact appearance in life remains unresolved and little is known about its behaviour It has been depicted with brownish grey plumage yellow feet a tuft of tail feathers a grey naked head and a black yellow and green beak It used gizzard stones to help digest its food which is thought to have included fruits and its main habitat is believed to have been the woods in the drier coastal areas of Mauritius One account states its clutch consisted of a single egg It is presumed that the dodo became flightless because of the ready availability of abundant food sources and a relative absence of predators on Mauritius Though the dodo has historically been portrayed as being fat and clumsy it is now thought to have been well adapted for its ecosystem The first recorded mention of the dodo was by Dutch sailors in 1598 In the following years the bird was hunted by sailors and invasive species while its habitat was being destroyed The last widely accepted sighting of a dodo was in 1662 Its extinction was not immediately noticed and some considered the bird to be a myth In the 19th century research was conducted on a small quantity of remains of four specimens that had been brought to Europe in the early 17th century Among these is a dried head the only soft tissue of the dodo that remains today Since then a large amount of subfossil material has been collected on Mauritius mostly from the Mare aux Songes swamp The extinction of the dodo within less than a century of its discovery called attention to the previously unrecognised problem of human involvement in the disappearance of entire species The dodo achieved widespread recognition from its role in the story of Alice s Adventures in Wonderland and it has since become a fixture in popular culture often as a symbol of extinction and obsolescence Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Evolution 1 2 Etymology 2 Description 2 1 Skeleton 2 2 Contemporary descriptions 2 3 Contemporary depictions 3 Behaviour and ecology 3 1 Diet and feeding 3 2 Reproduction and development 4 Relationship with humans 4 1 Dodos transported abroad 4 2 Extinction 5 Physical remains 5 1 17th century specimens 5 2 Subfossil specimens 6 White dodo 7 Cultural significance 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksTaxonomy nbsp nbsp Skull in the Zoological Museum of Copenhagen above and right half of the Oxford specimen s head below examination of these led to the dodo being classified as a pigeon in the 1840s The dodo was variously declared a small ostrich a rail an albatross or a vulture by early scientists 2 In 1842 Danish zoologist Johannes Theodor Reinhardt proposed that dodos were ground pigeons based on studies of a dodo skull he had discovered in the collection of the Natural History Museum of Denmark This view was met with ridicule but was later supported by English naturalists Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alexander Gordon Melville in their 1848 monograph The Dodo and Its Kindred which attempted to separate myth from reality 3 4 After dissecting the preserved head and foot of the specimen at the Oxford University Museum and comparing it with the few remains then available of the extinct Rodrigues solitaire Pezophaps solitaria they concluded that the two were closely related Strickland stated that although not identical these birds shared many distinguishing features of the leg bones otherwise known only in pigeons 5 Strickland and Melville established that the dodo was anatomically similar to pigeons in many features They pointed to the very short keratinous portion of the beak with its long slender naked basal part Other pigeons also have bare skin around their eyes almost reaching their beak as in dodos The forehead was high in relation to the beak and the nostril was located low on the middle of the beak and surrounded by skin a combination of features shared only with pigeons The legs of the dodo were generally more similar to those of terrestrial pigeons than of other birds both in their scales and in their skeletal features Depictions of the large crop hinted at a relationship with pigeons in which this feature is more developed than in other birds Pigeons generally have very small clutches and the dodo is said to have laid a single egg Like pigeons the dodo lacked the vomer and septum of the nostrils and it shared details in the mandible the zygomatic bone the palate and the hallux The dodo differed from other pigeons mainly in the small size of the wings and the large size of the beak in proportion to the rest of the cranium 5 Throughout the 19th century several species were classified as congeneric with the dodo including the Rodrigues solitaire and the Reunion solitaire as Didus solitarius and Raphus solitarius respectively Didus and Raphus being names for the dodo genus used by different authors of the time An atypical 17th century description of a dodo and bones found on Rodrigues now known to have belonged to the Rodrigues solitaire led Abraham Dee Bartlett to name a new species Didus nazarenus in 1852 6 Based on solitaire remains it is now a synonym of that species 7 Crude drawings of the red rail of Mauritius were also misinterpreted as dodo species Didus broeckii and Didus herberti 8 For many years the dodo and the Rodrigues solitaire were placed in a family of their own the Raphidae formerly Dididae because their exact relationships with other pigeons were unresolved Each was also placed in its own monotypic family Raphidae and Pezophapidae respectively as it was thought that they had evolved their similarities independently 9 Osteological and DNA analysis has since led to the dissolution of the family Raphidae and the dodo and solitaire are now placed in their own subfamily Raphinae within the family Columbidae 10 Evolution nbsp The Nicobar pigeon is the closest living relative of the dodoIn 2002 American geneticist Beth Shapiro and colleagues analysed the DNA of the dodo for the first time Comparison of mitochondrial cytochrome b and 12S rRNA sequences isolated from a tarsal of the Oxford specimen and a femur of a Rodrigues solitaire confirmed their close relationship and their placement within the Columbidae The genetic evidence was interpreted as showing the Southeast Asian Nicobar pigeon Caloenas nicobarica to be their closest living relative followed by the crowned pigeons Goura of New Guinea and the superficially dodo like tooth billed pigeon Didunculus strigirostris from Samoa its scientific name refers to its dodo like beak This clade consists of generally ground dwelling island endemic pigeons The following cladogram shows the dodo s closest relationships within the Columbidae based on Shapiro and colleagues 2002 11 12 Goura victoria Victoria crowned pigeon Caloenas nicobarica Nicobar pigeon Pezophaps solitaria Rodrigues solitaire Raphus cucullatus dodo Didunculus strigirostris tooth billed pigeon nbsp 1848 lithograph of the Oxford specimen s foot which has been used to sample DNA for genetic analysesA similar cladogram was published in 2007 inverting the placement of Goura and Didunculus and including the pheasant pigeon Otidiphaps nobilis and the thick billed ground pigeon Trugon terrestris at the base of the clade 13 The DNA used in these studies was obtained from the Oxford specimen and since this material is degraded and no usable DNA has been extracted from subfossil remains these findings still need to be independently verified 14 Based on behavioural and morphological evidence Jolyon C Parish proposed that the dodo and Rodrigues solitaire should be placed in the subfamily Gourinae along with the Goura pigeons and others in agreement with the genetic evidence 15 In 2014 DNA of the only known specimen of the recently extinct spotted green pigeon Caloenas maculata was analysed and it was found to be a close relative of the Nicobar pigeon and thus also the dodo and Rodrigues solitaire 16 The 2002 study indicated that the ancestors of the dodo and the solitaire diverged around the Paleogene Neogene boundary about 23 03 million years ago The Mascarene Islands Mauritius Reunion and Rodrigues are of volcanic origin and are less than 10 million years old Therefore the ancestors of both birds probably remained capable of flight for a considerable time after the separation of their lineage 17 The Nicobar and spotted green pigeon were placed at the base of a lineage leading to the Raphinae which indicates the flightless raphines had ancestors that were able to fly were semi terrestrial and inhabited islands This in turn supports the hypothesis that the ancestors of those birds reached the Mascarene islands by island hopping from South Asia 16 The lack of mammalian herbivores competing for resources on these islands allowed the solitaire and the dodo to attain very large sizes and flightlessness 18 19 Despite its divergent skull morphology and adaptations for larger size many features of its skeleton remained similar to those of smaller flying pigeons 20 Another large flightless pigeon the Viti Levu giant pigeon Natunaornis gigoura was described in 2001 from subfossil material from Fiji It was only slightly smaller than the dodo and the solitaire and it too is thought to have been related to the crowned pigeons 21 Etymology nbsp 1601 engraving showing Dutch activities on the shore of Mauritius and the first published depiction of a dodo on the left 2 called Walchvoghel One of the original names for the dodo was the Dutch Walghvoghel first used in the journal of Dutch Vice Admiral Wybrand van Warwijck who visited Mauritius during the Second Dutch Expedition to Indonesia in 1598 22 Walghe means tasteless insipid or sickly and voghel means bird The name was translated by Jakob Friedlib into German as Walchstok or Walchvogel The original Dutch report titled Waarachtige Beschryving was lost but the English translation survived 23 15 On their left hand was a little island which they named Heemskirk Island and the bay it selve they called Warwick Bay Here they taried 12 daies to refresh themselues finding in this place great quantity of foules twice as bigge as swans which they call Walghstocks or Wallowbirdes being very good meat But finding an abundance of pigeons amp popinnayes parrots they disdained any more to eat those great foules calling them Wallowbirds that is to say lothsome or fulsome birdes 24 25 Another account from that voyage perhaps the first to mention the dodo states that the Portuguese referred to them as penguins The meaning may not have been derived from penguin the Portuguese referred to those birds as fotilicaios at the time but from pinion a reference to the small wings 22 The crew of the Dutch ship Gelderland referred to the bird as Dronte meaning swollen in 1602 a name that is still used in some languages 26 This crew also called them griff eendt and kermisgans in reference to fowl fattened for the Kermesse festival in Amsterdam which was held the day after they anchored on Mauritius 27 nbsp Labelled sketch from 1634 by Sir Thomas Herbert showing a broad billed parrot a red rail and a dodoThe etymology of the word dodo is unclear Some ascribe it to the Dutch word dodoor for sluggard but it is more probably related to Dodaars which means either fat arse or knot arse referring to the knot of feathers on the hind end 28 The first record of the word Dodaars is in Captain Willem Van West Zanen s journal in 1602 29 The English writer Sir Thomas Herbert was the first to use the word dodo in print in his 1634 travelogue claiming it was referred to as such by the Portuguese who had visited Mauritius in 1507 27 Another Englishman Emmanuel Altham had used the word in a 1628 letter in which he also claimed its origin was Portuguese The name dodar was introduced into English at the same time as dodo but was only used until the 18th century 30 As far as is known the Portuguese never mentioned the bird Nevertheless some sources still state that the word dodo derives from the Portuguese word doudo currently doido meaning fool or crazy It has also been suggested that dodo was an onomatopoeic approximation of the bird s call a two note pigeon like sound resembling doo doo 31 The Latin name cucullatus hooded was first used by Juan Eusebio Nieremberg in 1635 as Cygnus cucullatus in reference to Carolus Clusius s 1605 depiction of a dodo In his 18th century classic work Systema Naturae Carl Linnaeus used cucullatus as the specific name but combined it with the genus name Struthio ostrich 5 Mathurin Jacques Brisson coined the genus name Raphus referring to the bustards in 1760 resulting in the current name Raphus cucullatus In 1766 Linnaeus coined the new binomial Didus ineptus meaning inept dodo This has become a synonym of the earlier name because of nomenclatural priority 32 Description nbsp Size compared to a humanAs no complete dodo specimens exist its external appearance such as plumage and colouration is hard to determine 22 Illustrations and written accounts of encounters with the dodo between its discovery and its extinction 1598 1662 are the primary evidence for its external appearance 33 According to most representations the dodo had greyish or brownish plumage with lighter primary feathers and a tuft of curly light feathers high on its rear end The head was grey and naked the beak green black and yellow and the legs were stout and yellowish with black claws 34 A study of the few remaining feathers on the Oxford specimen head showed that they were pennaceous rather than plumaceous downy and most similar to those of other pigeons 35 Subfossil remains and remnants of the birds that were brought to Europe in the 17th century show that dodos were very large birds measuring around 62 6 75 cm 2 05 2 46 ft in height 36 37 The bird was sexually dimorphic males were larger and had proportionally longer beaks Weight estimates have varied from study to study In 1993 Bradley C Livezey proposed that males would have weighed 21 kilograms 46 lb and females 17 kilograms 37 lb 38 Also in 1993 Andrew C Kitchener attributed a high contemporary weight estimate and the roundness of dodos depicted in Europe to these birds having been overfed in captivity weights in the wild were estimated to have been in the range of 10 6 17 5 kg 23 39 lb and fattened birds could have weighed 21 7 27 8 kg 48 61 lb 39 A 2011 estimate by Angst and colleagues gave an average weight as low as 10 2 kg 22 lb 40 This has also been questioned and there is still controversy over weight estimates 41 42 A 2016 study estimated the weight at 10 6 to 14 3 kg 23 to 32 lb based on CT scans of composite skeletons 43 It has also been suggested that the weight depended on the season and that individuals were fat during cool seasons but less so during hot 37 Skeleton nbsp 1848 lithographs of the Oxford dodo s skull in multiple viewsThe skull of the dodo differed much from those of other pigeons especially in being more robust the bill having a hooked tip and in having a short cranium compared to the jaws The upper bill was nearly twice as long as the cranium which was short compared to those of its closest pigeon relatives The openings of the bony nostrils were elongated along the length of the beak and they contained no bony septum The cranium excluding the beak was wider than it was long and the frontal bone formed a dome shape with the highest point above the hind part of the eye sockets The skull sloped downwards at the back The eye sockets occupied much of the hind part of the skull The sclerotic rings inside the eye were formed by eleven ossicles small bones similar to the amount in other pigeons The mandible was slightly curved and each half had a single fenestra opening as in other pigeons 20 nbsp Skeleton of the dodo left and its closest relative the Rodrigues solitaire not to scaleThe dodo had about nineteen presynsacral vertebrae those of the neck and thorax including three fused into a notarium sixteen synsacral vertebrae those of the lumbar region and sacrum six free tail caudal vertebrae and a pygostyle The neck had well developed areas for muscle and ligament attachment probably to support the heavy skull and beak On each side it had six ribs four of which articulated with the sternum through sternal ribs The sternum was large but small in relation to the body compared to those of much smaller pigeons that are able to fly The sternum was highly pneumatic broad and relatively thick in cross section The bones of the pectoral girdle shoulder blades and wing bones were reduced in size compared to those of flighted pigeon and were more gracile compared to those of the Rodrigues solitaire but none of the individual skeletal components had disappeared The carpometacarpus of the dodo was more robust than that of the solitaire however The pelvis was wider than that of the solitaire and other relatives yet was comparable to the proportions in some smaller flighted pigeons Most of the leg bones were more robust than those of extant pigeons and the solitaire but the length proportions were little different 20 Many of the skeletal features that distinguish the dodo and the Rodrigues solitaire its closest relative from other pigeons have been attributed to their flightlessness The pelvic elements were thicker than those of flighted pigeons to support the higher weight and the pectoral region and the small wings were paedomorphic meaning that they were underdeveloped and retained juvenile features The skull trunk and pelvic limbs were peramorphic meaning that they changed considerably with age The dodo shared several other traits with the Rodrigues solitaire such as features of the skull pelvis and sternum as well as their large size It differed in other aspects such as being more robust and shorter than the solitaire having a larger skull and beak a rounded skull roof and smaller orbits The dodo s neck and legs were proportionally shorter and it did not possess an equivalent to the knob present on the solitaire s wrists 38 Contemporary descriptions nbsp nbsp Dodo among Indian birds left by Ustad Mansur c 1625 perhaps the most accurate depiction of a live dodo and dodo head right by Cornelis Saftleven from 1638 probably the last original depiction of the species Most contemporary descriptions of the dodo are found in ship s logs and journals of the Dutch East India Company vessels that docked in Mauritius when the Dutch Empire ruled the island These records were used as guides for future voyages 14 Few contemporary accounts are reliable as many seem to be based on earlier accounts and none were written by scientists 22 One of the earliest accounts from van Warwijck s 1598 journal describes the bird as follows Blue parrots are very numerous there as well as other birds among which are a kind conspicuous for their size larger than our swans with huge heads only half covered with skin as if clothed with a hood These birds lack wings in the place of which 3 or 4 blackish feathers protrude The tail consists of a few soft incurved feathers which are ash coloured These we used to call Walghvogel for the reason that the longer and oftener they were cooked the less soft and more insipid eating they became Nevertheless their belly and breast were of a pleasant flavour and easily masticated 44 One of the most detailed descriptions is by Herbert in A Relation of Some Yeares Travaille into Afrique and the Greater Asia from 1634 First here only and in Dygarrois Rodrigues is generated the Dodo which for shape and rareness may antagonize the Phoenix of Arabia her body is round and fat few weigh less than fifty pound It is reputed more for wonder than for food greasie stomackes may seeke after them but to the delicate they are offensive and of no nourishment Her visage darts forth melancholy as sensible of Nature s injurie in framing so great a body to be guided with complementall wings so small and impotent that they serve only to prove her bird The halfe of her head is naked seeming couered with a fine vaile her bill is crooked downwards in midst is the thrill nostril from which part to the end tis a light green mixed with pale yellow tincture her eyes are small and like to Diamonds round and rowling her clothing downy feathers her train three small plumes short and inproportionable her legs suiting her body her pounces sharpe her appetite strong and greedy Stones and iron are digested which description will better be conceived in her representation 45 Contemporary depictions nbsp Compilation of the Gelderland ship s journal sketches from 1601 of live and recently killed dodos attributed to Joris LaerleThe travel journal of the Dutch ship Gelderland 1601 1603 rediscovered in the 1860s contains the only known sketches of living or recently killed specimens drawn on Mauritius They have been attributed to the professional artist Joris Joostensz Laerle who also drew other now extinct Mauritian birds and to a second less refined artist 46 Apart from these sketches it is unknown how many of the twenty or so 17th century illustrations of the dodos were drawn from life or from stuffed specimens which affects their reliability 22 Since dodos are otherwise only known from limited physical remains and descriptions contemporary artworks are important to reconstruct their appearance in life While there has been an effort since the mid 19 century to list all historical illustrations of dodos previously unknown depictions continue to be discovered occasionally 47 The traditional image of the dodo is of a very fat and clumsy bird but this view may be exaggerated The general opinion of scientists today is that many old European depictions were based on overfed captive birds or crudely stuffed specimens 48 It has also been suggested that the images might show dodos with puffed feathers as part of display behaviour 40 The Dutch painter Roelant Savery was the most prolific and influential illustrator of the dodo having made at least twelve depictions often showing it in the lower corners A famous painting of his from 1626 now called Edwards s Dodo as it was once owned by the ornithologist George Edwards has since become the standard image of a dodo It is housed in the Natural History Museum London The image shows a particularly fat bird and is the source for many other dodo illustrations 49 50 nbsp The famous Edwards s Dodo painted by Roelant Savery in 1626An Indian Mughal painting rediscovered in the Hermitage Museum St Petersburg in 1955 shows a dodo along with native Indian birds 51 It depicts a slimmer brownish bird and its discoverer Aleksander Iwanow and British palaeontologist Julian Hume regarded it as one of the most accurate depictions of the living dodo the surrounding birds are clearly identifiable and depicted with appropriate colouring 52 It is believed to be from the 17th century and has been attributed to the Mughal painter Ustad Mansur The bird depicted probably lived in the menagerie of the Mughal Emperor Jahangir located in Surat where the English traveller Peter Mundy also claimed to have seen two dodos sometime between 1628 and 1633 53 22 In 2014 another Indian illustration of a dodo was reported but it was found to be derivative of an 1836 German illustration 54 All post 1638 depictions appear to be based on earlier images around the time reports mentioning dodos became rarer Differences in the depictions led ornithologists such as Anthonie Cornelis Oudemans and Masauji Hachisuka to speculate about sexual dimorphism ontogenic traits seasonal variation and even the existence of different species but these theories are not accepted today Because details such as markings of the beak the form of the tail feathers and colouration vary from account to account it is impossible to determine the exact morphology of these features whether they signal age or sex or if they even reflect reality 55 Hume argued that the nostrils of the living dodo would have been slits as seen in the Gelderland Cornelis Saftleven Savery s Crocker Art Gallery and Mansur images According to this claim the gaping nostrils often seen in paintings indicate that taxidermy specimens were used as models 22 Most depictions show that the wings were held in an extended position unlike flighted pigeons but similar to ratites such as the ostrich and kiwi 20 Behaviour and ecology nbsp Modern life restoration of a slim dodo by Julian P HumeLittle is known of the behaviour of the dodo as most contemporary descriptions are very brief Based on weight estimates it has been suggested the male could reach the age of 21 and the female 17 38 Studies of the cantilever strength of its leg bones indicate that it could run quite fast 39 The legs were robust and strong to support the bulk of the bird and also made it agile and manoeuvrable in the dense pre human landscape Though the wings were small well developed muscle scars on the bones show that they were not completely vestigial and may have been used for display behaviour and balance extant pigeons also use their wings for such purposes 20 Unlike the Rodrigues solitaire there is no evidence that the dodo used its wings in intraspecific combat Though some dodo bones have been found with healed fractures it had weak pectoral muscles and more reduced wings in comparison The dodo may instead have used its large hooked beak in territorial disputes Since Mauritius receives more rainfall and has less seasonal variation than Rodrigues which would have affected the availability of resources on the island the dodo would have less reason to evolve aggressive territorial behaviour The Rodrigues solitaire was therefore probably the more aggressive of the two 56 In 2016 the first 3D endocast was made from the brain of the dodo the brain to body size ratio was similar to that of modern pigeons indicating that dodos were probably equal in intelligence 57 nbsp 1601 map of a bay on Mauritius the small D on the far right side marks where dodos were foundThe preferred habitat of the dodo is unknown but old descriptions suggest that it inhabited the woods on the drier coastal areas of south and west Mauritius This view is supported by the fact that the Mare aux Songes swamp where most dodo remains have been excavated is close to the sea in south eastern Mauritius 58 Such a limited distribution across the island could well have contributed to its extinction 59 A 1601 map from the Gelderland journal shows a small island off the coast of Mauritius where dodos were caught Julian Hume has suggested this island was l ile aux Benitiers in Tamarin Bay on the west coast of Mauritius 60 46 Subfossil bones have also been found inside caves in highland areas indicating that it once occurred on mountains Work at the Mare aux Songes swamp has shown that its habitat was dominated by tambalacoque and Pandanus trees and endemic palms 37 The near coastal placement and wetness of the Mare aux Songes led to a high diversity of plant species whereas the surrounding areas were drier 61 Many endemic species of Mauritius became extinct after the arrival of humans so the ecosystem of the island is badly damaged and hard to reconstruct Before humans arrived Mauritius was entirely covered in forests but very little remains of them today because of deforestation 62 The surviving endemic fauna is still seriously threatened 63 The dodo lived alongside other recently extinct Mauritian birds such as the flightless red rail the broad billed parrot the Mascarene grey parakeet the Mauritius blue pigeon the Mauritius scops owl the Mascarene coot the Mauritian shelduck the Mauritian duck and the Mauritius night heron Extinct Mauritian reptiles include the saddle backed Mauritius giant tortoise the domed Mauritius giant tortoise the Mauritian giant skink and the Round Island burrowing boa The small Mauritian flying fox and the snail Tropidophora carinata lived on Mauritius and Reunion but vanished from both islands Some plants such as Casearia tinifolia and the palm orchid have also become extinct 64 Diet and feeding nbsp Savery sketch of three dodos from c 1626 Crocker Art GalleryA 1631 Dutch letter long thought lost but rediscovered in 2017 is the only account of the dodo s diet and also mentions that it used its beak for defence The document uses word play to refer to the animals described with dodos presumably being an allegory for wealthy mayors 65 The mayors are superb and proud They presented themselves with an unyielding stern face and wide open mouth very jaunty and audacious of gait They did not want to budge before us their war weapon was the mouth with which they could bite fiercely Their food was raw fruit they were not dressed very well but were rich and fat therefore we brought many of them on board to the contentment of us all 65 In addition to fallen fruits the dodo probably subsisted on nuts seeds bulbs and roots 66 It has also been suggested that the dodo might have eaten crabs and shellfish like their relatives the crowned pigeons Its feeding habits must have been versatile since captive specimens were probably given a wide range of food on the long sea journeys 67 Oudemans suggested that as Mauritius has marked dry and wet seasons the dodo probably fattened itself on ripe fruits at the end of the wet season to survive the dry season when food was scarce contemporary reports describe the bird s greedy appetite The Mauritian ornithologist France Staub suggested in 1996 that they mainly fed on palm fruits and he attempted to correlate the fat cycle of the dodo with the fruiting regime of the palms 29 nbsp Dodo and its gizzard stone by Carolus Clusius from 1605 copied from an illustration in the journal of Jacob van NeckSkeletal elements of the upper jaw appear to have been rhynchokinetic movable in relation to each other which must have affected its feeding behaviour In extant birds such as frugivorous fruit eating pigeons kinetic premaxillae help with consuming large food items The beak also appears to have been able to withstand high force loads which indicates a diet of hard food 20 Examination of the brain endocast found that though the brain was similar to that of other pigeons in most respects the dodo had a comparatively large olfactory bulb This gave the dodo a good sense of smell which may have aided in locating fruit and small prey 57 Several contemporary sources state that the dodo used Gastroliths gizzard stones to aid digestion The English writer Sir Hamon L Estrange witnessed a live bird in London and described it as follows About 1638 as I walked London streets I saw the picture of a strange looking fowle hung out upon a clothe and myselfe with one or two more in company went in to see it It was kept in a chamber and was a great fowle somewhat bigger than the largest Turkey cock and so legged and footed but stouter and thicker and of more erect shape coloured before like the breast of a young cock fesan and on the back of a dunn or dearc colour The keeper called it a Dodo and in the ende of a chymney in the chamber there lay a heape of large pebble stones whereof hee gave it many in our sight some as big as nutmegs and the keeper told us that she eats them conducing to digestion and though I remember not how far the keeper was questioned therein yet I am confident that afterwards she cast them all again 68 It is not known how the young were fed but related pigeons provide crop milk Contemporary depictions show a large crop which was probably used to add space for food storage and to produce crop milk It has been suggested that the maximum size attained by the dodo and the solitaire was limited by the amount of crop milk they could produce for their young during early growth 69 In 1973 the tambalacoque also known as the dodo tree was thought to be dying out on Mauritius to which it is endemic There were supposedly only 13 specimens left all estimated to be about 300 years old Stanley Temple hypothesised that it depended on the dodo for its propagation and that its seeds would germinate only after passing through the bird s digestive tract He claimed that the tambalacoque was now nearly coextinct because of the disappearance of the dodo 70 Temple overlooked reports from the 1940s that found that tambalacoque seeds germinated albeit very rarely without being abraded during digestion 71 Others have contested his hypothesis and suggested that the decline of the tree was exaggerated or seeds were also distributed by other extinct animals such as Cylindraspis tortoises fruit bats or the broad billed parrot 72 According to Wendy Strahm and Anthony Cheke two experts in the ecology of the Mascarene Islands the tree while rare has germinated since the demise of the dodo and numbers several hundred not 13 as claimed by Temple hence discrediting Temple s view as to the dodo and the tree s sole survival relationship 73 The Brazilian ornithologist Carlos Yamashita suggested in 1997 that the broad billed parrot may have depended on dodos and Cylindraspis tortoises to eat palm fruits and excrete their seeds which became food for the parrots Anodorhynchus macaws depended on now extinct South American megafauna in the same way but now rely on domesticated cattle for this service 74 Reproduction and development nbsp Replica of an alleged dodo egg in a reconstructed nest East London MuseumAs it was flightless and terrestrial and there were no mammalian predators or other kinds of natural enemy on Mauritius the dodo probably nested on the ground 75 The account by Francois Cauche from 1651 is the only description of the egg and the call I have seen in Mauritius birds bigger than a Swan without feathers on the body which is covered with a black down the hinder part is round the rump adorned with curled feathers as many in number as the bird is years old In place of wings they have feathers like these last black and curved without webs They have no tongues the beak is large curving a little downwards their legs are long scaly with only three toes on each foot It has a cry like a gosling and is by no means so savoury to eat as the Flamingos and Ducks of which we have just spoken They only lay one egg which is white the size of a halfpenny roll by the side of which they place a white stone the size of a hen s egg They lay on grass which they collect and make their nests in the forests if one kills the young one a grey stone is found in the gizzard We call them Oiseaux de Nazaret The fat is excellent to give ease to the muscles and nerves 5 nbsp Thin sections of hindlimb bones showing stages of the growth series nbsp Diagram showing life history events of a dodo based on histology and accounts Cauche s account is problematic since it also mentions that the bird he was describing had three toes and no tongue unlike dodos This led some to believe that Cauche was describing a new species of dodo Didus nazarenus The description was most probably mingled with that of a cassowary and Cauche s writings have other inconsistencies 76 A mention of a young ostrich taken on board a ship in 1617 is the only other reference to a possible juvenile dodo 77 An egg claimed to be that of a dodo is stored in the East London Museum in South Africa It was donated by the South African museum official Marjorie Courtenay Latimer whose great aunt had received it from a captain who claimed to have found it in a swamp on Mauritius In 2010 the curator of the museum proposed using genetic studies to determine its authenticity 78 It may instead be an aberrant ostrich egg 31 Because of the possible single egg clutch and the bird s large size it has been proposed that the dodo was K selected meaning that it produced few altricial offspring which required parental care until they matured Some evidence including the large size and the fact that tropical and frugivorous birds have slower growth rates indicates that the bird may have had a protracted development period 38 The fact that no juvenile dodos have been found in the Mare aux Songes swamp may indicate that they produced little offspring that they matured rapidly that the breeding grounds were far away from the swamp or that the risk of miring was seasonal 79 A 2017 study examined the histology of thin sectioned dodo bones modern Mauritian birds local ecology and contemporary accounts to recover information about the life history of the dodo The study suggested that dodos bred around August after having potentially fattened themselves corresponding with the fat and thin cycles of many vertebrates of Mauritius The chicks grew rapidly reaching robust almost adult sizes and sexual maturity before Austral summer or the cyclone season Adult dodos which had just bred moulted after Austral summer around March The feathers of the wings and tail were replaced first and the moulting would have completed at the end of July in time for the next breeding season Different stages of moulting may also account for inconsistencies in contemporary descriptions of dodo plumage 80 Relationship with humans nbsp 1648 engraving showing the killing of dodos centre left erroneously depicted as penguin like and other animals now extinct from MauritiusMauritius had previously been visited by Arab vessels in the Middle Ages and Portuguese ships between 1507 and 1513 but was settled by neither No records of dodos by these are known although the Portuguese name for Mauritius Cerne swan Island may have been a reference to dodos 81 The Dutch Empire acquired Mauritius in 1598 renaming it after Maurice of Nassau and it was used for the provisioning of trade vessels of the Dutch East India Company henceforward 82 The earliest known accounts of the dodo were provided by Dutch travellers during the Second Dutch Expedition to Indonesia led by admiral Jacob van Neck in 1598 They appear in reports published in 1601 which also contain the first published illustration of the bird 83 Since the first sailors to visit Mauritius had been at sea for a long time their interest in these large birds was mainly culinary The 1602 journal by Willem Van West Zanen of the ship Bruin Vis mentions that 24 25 dodos were hunted for food which were so large that two could scarcely be consumed at mealtime their remains being preserved by salting 84 An illustration made for the 1648 published version of this journal showing the killing of dodos a dugong and possibly Mascarene grey parakeets was captioned with a Dutch poem 85 here in Hugh Strickland s 1848 translation For food the seamen hunt the flesh of feathered fowl They tap the palms and round rumped dodos they destroy The parrot s life they spare that he may peep and howl And thus his fellows to imprisonment decoy 86 Some early travellers found dodo meat unsavoury and preferred to eat parrots and pigeons others described it as tough but good Some hunted dodos only for their gizzards as this was considered the most delicious part of the bird Dodos were easy to catch but hunters had to be careful not to be bitten by their powerful beaks 87 The appearance of the dodo and the red rail led Peter Mundy to speculate 230 years before Charles Darwin s theory of evolution Of these 2 sorts off fowl afforementionede For oughtt wee yett know Not any to bee Found out of this Iland which lyeth aboutt 100 leagues From St Lawrence A question may bee demaunded how they should bee here and Not elcewhere beeing soe Farer From other land and can Neither fly or swymme whither by Mixture off kindes producing straunge and Monstrous formes or the Nature of the Climate ayer and earth in alltring the First shapes in long tyme or how 26 Dodos transported abroad nbsp Painting of a possibly stuffed specimen in the collection of Emperor Rudolph II in Prague by Jacob Hoefnagel early 1600s nbsp Adriaen van de Venne s 1626 depiction of a dodo he claimed to have seen The dodo was found interesting enough that living specimens were sent to Europe and the East The number of transported dodos that reached their destinations alive is uncertain and it is unknown how they relate to contemporary depictions and the few non fossil remains in European museums Based on a combination of contemporary accounts paintings and specimens Julian Hume has inferred that at least eleven transported dodos reached their destinations alive 88 Hamon L Estrange s description of a dodo that he saw in London in 1638 is the only account that specifically mentions a live specimen in Europe In 1626 Adriaen van de Venne drew a dodo that he claimed to have seen in Amsterdam but he did not mention if it was alive and his depiction is reminiscent of Savery s Edwards s Dodo Two live specimens were seen by Peter Mundy in Surat India between 1628 and 1634 one of which may have been the individual painted by Mansur around 1625 22 In 1628 Emmanuel Altham visited Mauritius and sent a letter to his brother in England Right wo and lovinge brother we were ordered by ye said councell to go to an island called Mauritius lying in 20d of south latt where we arrived ye 28th of May this island having many goates hogs and cowes upon it and very strange fowles called by ye portingalls Dodo which for the rareness of the same the like being not in ye world but here I have sent you one by Mr Perce who did arrive with the ship William at this island ye 10th of June In the margin of the letter Of Mr Perce you shall receive a jarr of ginger for my sister some beades for my cousins your daughters and a bird called a Dodo if it live 89 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Savery paintings featuring dodos in various corners one with a lobster s body lower right painted in Europe approximately between 1625 and 1629 Whether the dodo survived the journey is unknown and the letter was destroyed by fire in the 19th century 90 The earliest known picture of a dodo specimen in Europe is from a c 1610 collection of paintings depicting animals in the royal menagerie of Emperor Rudolph II in Prague This collection includes paintings of other Mauritian animals as well including a red rail The dodo which may be a juvenile seems to have been dried or embalmed and had probably lived in the emperor s zoo for a while together with the other animals That whole stuffed dodos were present in Europe indicates they had been brought alive and died there it is unlikely that taxidermists were on board the visiting ships and spirits were not yet used to preserve biological specimens Most tropical specimens were preserved as dried heads and feet 88 One dodo was reportedly sent as far as Nagasaki Japan in 1647 but it was long unknown whether it arrived 74 Contemporary documents first published in 2014 proved the story and showed that it had arrived alive It was meant as a gift and despite its rarity was considered of equal value to a white deer and a bezoar stone It is the last recorded live dodo in captivity 91 Extinction nbsp Illustration of Dutch sailors pursuing dodos by Walter Paget 1914 Hunting by humans is not believed to have been the main cause of the bird s extinction Like many animals that evolved in isolation from significant predators the dodo was entirely fearless of humans This fearlessness and its inability to fly made the dodo easy prey for sailors 92 Although some scattered reports describe mass killings of dodos for ships provisions archaeological investigations have found scant evidence of human predation Bones of at least two dodos were found in caves at Baie du Cap that sheltered fugitive slaves and convicts in the 17th century which would not have been easily accessible to dodos because of the high broken terrain 10 The human population on Mauritius an area of 1 860 km2 or 720 sq mi never exceeded 50 people in the 17th century but they introduced other animals including dogs pigs cats rats and crab eating macaques which plundered dodo nests and competed for the limited food resources 37 At the same time humans destroyed the forest habitat of the dodos The impact of the introduced animals on the dodo population especially the pigs and macaques is today considered more severe than that of hunting 93 Rats were perhaps not much of a threat to the nests since dodos would have been used to dealing with local land crabs 94 It has been suggested that the dodo may already have been rare or localised before the arrival of humans on Mauritius since it would have been unlikely to become extinct so rapidly if it had occupied all the remote areas of the island 59 A 2005 expedition found subfossil remains of dodos and other animals killed by a flash flood Such mass mortalities would have further jeopardised a species already in danger of becoming extinct 95 Yet the fact that the dodo survived hundreds of years of volcanic activity and climatic changes shows the bird was resilient within its ecosystem 61 Some controversy surrounds the date of its extinction The last widely accepted record of a dodo sighting is the 1662 report by shipwrecked mariner Volkert Evertsz of the Dutch ship Arnhem who described birds caught on a small islet off Mauritius now suggested to be Amber Island These animals on our coming up to them stared at us and remained quiet where they stand not knowing whether they had wings to fly away or legs to run off and suffering us to approach them as close as we pleased Amongst these birds were those which in India they call Dod aersen being a kind of very big goose these birds are unable to fly and instead of wings they merely have a few small pins yet they can run very swiftly We drove them together into one place in such a manner that we could catch them with our hands and when we held one of them by its leg and that upon this it made a great noise the others all on a sudden came running as fast as they could to its assistance and by which they were caught and made prisoners also 96 The dodos on this islet may not necessarily have been the last members of the species 97 The last claimed sighting of a dodo was reported in the hunting records of Isaac Johannes Lamotius in 1688 A 2003 statistical analysis of these records by the biologists David L Roberts and Andrew R Solow gave a new estimated extinction date of 1693 with a 95 confidence interval of 1688 1715 These authors also pointed out that because the last sighting before 1662 was in 1638 the dodo was probably already quite rare by the 1660s and thus a disputed report from 1674 by an escaped slave could not be dismissed out of hand 98 nbsp nbsp Pieter van den Broecke s 1617 drawing of a dodo a one horned sheep and a red rail after the dodo became extinct visitors may have confused it with the red rail 1907 restoration of that bird at right by Frederick William Frohawk The British ornithologist Alfred Newton suggested in 1868 that the name of the dodo was transferred to the red rail after the former had gone extinct 99 Cheke also pointed out that some descriptions after 1662 use the names Dodo and Dodaers when referring to the red rail indicating that they had been transferred to it 100 He therefore pointed to the 1662 description as the last credible observation A 1668 account by English traveller John Marshall who used the names Dodo and Red Hen interchangeably for the red rail mentioned that the meat was hard which echoes the description of the meat in the 1681 account 101 Even the 1662 account has been questioned by the writer Errol Fuller as the reaction to distress cries matches what was described for the red rail 102 Until this explanation was proposed a description of dodos from 1681 was thought to be the last account and that date still has proponents 103 Cheke stated in 2014 that then recently accessible Dutch manuscripts indicate that no dodos were seen by settlers in 1664 1674 104 In 2020 Cheke and the British researcher Jolyon C Parish suggested that all mentions of dodos after the mid 17th century instead referred to red rails and that the dodo had disappeared due to predation by feral pigs during a hiatus in settlement of Mauritius 1658 1664 The dodo s extinction therefore was not realised at the time since new settlers had not seen real dodos but as they expected to see flightless birds they referred to the red rail by that name instead Since red rails probably had larger clutches than dodos and their eggs could be incubated faster and their nests were perhaps concealed they probably bred more efficiently and were less vulnerable to pigs 105 It is unlikely the issue will ever be resolved unless late reports mentioning the name alongside a physical description are rediscovered 94 The IUCN Red List accepts Cheke s rationale for choosing the 1662 date taking all subsequent reports to refer to red rails In any case the dodo was probably extinct by 1700 about a century after its discovery in 1598 1 101 The Dutch left Mauritius in 1710 but by then the dodo and most of the large terrestrial vertebrates there had become extinct 37 Even though the rareness of the dodo was reported already in the 17th century its extinction was not recognised until the 19th century This was partly because for religious reasons extinction was not believed possible until later proved so by Georges Cuvier and partly because many scientists doubted that the dodo had ever existed It seemed altogether too strange a creature and many believed it a myth The bird was first used as an example of human induced extinction in Penny Magazine in 1833 106 and has since been referred to as an icon of extinction 107 Physical remains17th century specimens nbsp nbsp Cast of the Oxford head before dissection and the lost London foot at Booth Museum and illustration of same head The only extant remains of dodos taken to Europe in the 17th century are a dried head and foot in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History a foot once housed in the British Museum but now lost a skull in the University of Copenhagen Zoological Museum and an upper jaw in the National Museum Prague The last two were rediscovered and identified as dodo remains in the mid 19th century 108 Several stuffed dodos were also mentioned in old museum inventories but none are known to have survived 109 Apart from these remains a dried foot which belonged to the Dutch professor Pieter Pauw was mentioned by Carolus Clusius in 1605 Its provenance is unknown and it is now lost but it may have been collected during the Van Neck voyage 22 Supposed stuffed dodos seen in museums around the world today have in fact been made from feathers of other birds many of the older ones by the British taxidermist Rowland Ward s company 108 nbsp nbsp Coloured engraving of the now lost London foot from 1793 left and 1848 lithograph of same in multiple views The only known soft tissue remains the Oxford head specimen OUM 11605 and foot belonged to the last known stuffed dodo which was first mentioned as part of the Tradescant collection in 1656 and was moved to the Ashmolean Museum in 1659 22 It has been suggested that this might be the remains of the bird that Hamon L Estrange saw in London the bird sent by Emanuel Altham or a donation by Thomas Herbert Since the remains do not show signs of having been mounted the specimen might instead have been preserved as a study skin 110 In 2018 it was reported that scans of the Oxford dodo s head showed that its skin and bone contained lead shot pellets which were used to hunt birds in the 17th century This indicates that the Oxford dodo was shot either before being transported to Britain or some time after arriving The circumstances of its killing are unknown and the pellets are to be examined to identify where the lead was mined from 111 112 Many sources state that the Ashmolean Museum burned the stuffed dodo around 1755 because of severe decay saving only the head and leg Statute 8 of the museum states That as any particular grows old and perishing the keeper may remove it into one of the closets or other repository and some other to be substituted 113 The deliberate destruction of the specimen is now believed to be a myth it was removed from exhibition to preserve what remained of it This remaining soft tissue has since degraded further the head was dissected by Strickland and Melville separating the skin from the skull in two halves The foot is in a skeletal state with only scraps of skin and tendons Very few feathers remain on the head It is probably a female as the foot is 11 smaller and more gracile than the London foot yet appears to be fully grown 114 The specimen was exhibited at the Oxford museum from at least the 1860s and until 1998 where after it was mainly kept in storage to prevent damage 115 Casts of the head can today be found in many museums worldwide 110 nbsp nbsp Upper jaw of a dodo in the National Museum of Prague left and 1855 lithograph of the specimen The dried London foot first mentioned in 1665 and transferred to the British Museum in the 18th century was displayed next to Savery s Edwards s Dodo painting until the 1840s and it too was dissected by Strickland and Melville It was not posed in a standing posture which suggests that it was severed from a fresh specimen not a mounted one By 1896 it was mentioned as being without its integuments and only the bones are believed to remain today though its present whereabouts are unknown 22 The Copenhagen skull specimen ZMUC 90 806 is known to have been part of the collection of Bernardus Paludanus in Enkhuizen until 1651 when it was moved to the museum in Gottorf Castle Schleswig 116 After the castle was occupied by Danish forces in 1702 the museum collection was assimilated into the Royal Danish collection The skull was rediscovered by J T Reinhardt in 1840 Based on its history it may be the oldest known surviving remains of a dodo brought to Europe in the 17th century 22 It is 13 mm 0 51 in shorter than the Oxford skull and may have belonged to a female 38 It was mummified but the skin has perished 37 The front part of a skull specimen NMP P6V 004389 in the National Museum of Prague was found in 1850 among the remains of the Bohmisches Museum Other elements supposedly belonging to this specimen have been listed in the literature but it appears only the partial skull was ever present a partial right limb in the museum appears to be from a Rodrigues solitaire 22 117 118 It may be what remains of one of the stuffed dodos known to have been at the menagerie of Emperor Rudolph II possibly the specimen painted by Hoefnagel or Savery there 119 Subfossil specimens nbsp nbsp Richard Owen s 1866 reconstruction of the dodo s skeleton left based on bones found in the Mare aux Songes it is too squat following Savery s Edwards s Dodo painting and his more upright mount at Natural History Museum London Until 1860 the only known dodo remains were the four incomplete 17th century specimens Philip Burnard Ayres found the first subfossil bones in 1860 which were sent to Richard Owen at the British Museum who did not publish the findings In 1863 Owen requested the Mauritian Bishop Vincent Ryan to spread word that he should be informed if any dodo bones were found 2 In 1865 George Clark the government schoolmaster at Mahebourg finally found an abundance of subfossil dodo bones in the swamp of Mare aux Songes in Southern Mauritius after a 30 year search inspired by Strickland and Melville s monograph 22 In 1866 Clark explained his procedure to The Ibis an ornithology journal he had sent his coolies to wade through the centre of the swamp feeling for bones with their feet At first they found few bones until they cut away herbage that covered the deepest part of the swamp where they found many fossils 120 Harry Pasley Higginson a railway engineer from Yorkshire reports discovering the Mare aux Songes bones at the same time as Clark and there is some dispute over who found them first Higginson sent boxes of these bones to Liverpool Leeds and York museums 121 122 The swamp yielded the remains of over 300 dodos but very few skull and wing bones possibly because the upper bodies were washed away or scavenged while the lower body was trapped The situation is similar to many finds of moa remains in New Zealand marshes 123 Most dodo remains from the Mare aux Songes have a medium to dark brown colouration 79 Clark s reports about the finds rekindled interest in the bird Sir Richard Owen and Alfred Newton both wanted to be first to describe the post cranial anatomy of the dodo and Owen bought a shipment of dodo bones originally meant for Newton which led to rivalry between the two Owen described the bones in Memoir on the Dodo in October 1866 but erroneously based his reconstruction on the Edwards s Dodo painting by Savery making it too squat and obese In 1869 he received more bones and corrected its stance making it more upright Newton moved his focus to the Reunion solitaire instead The remaining bones not sold to Owen or Newton were auctioned off or donated to museums 2 124 In 1889 Theodor Sauzier was commissioned to explore the historical souvenirs of Mauritius and find more dodo remains in the Mare aux Songes He was successful and also found remains of other extinct species 125 nbsp Skeleton assembled from subfossils found in 2006 Naturalis nbsp Subfossil bones rediscovered in the Grant Museum in 2011 In 2005 after a hundred years of neglect a part of the Mare aux Songes swamp was excavated by an international team of researchers International Dodo Research Project To prevent malaria the British had covered the swamp with hard core during their rule over Mauritius which had to be removed Many remains were found including bones of at least 17 dodos in various stages of maturity though no juveniles and several bones obviously from the skeleton of one individual bird which have been preserved in their natural position 126 These findings were made public in December 2005 in the Naturalis museum in Leiden 63 of the fossils found in the swamp belonged to turtles of the extinct genus Cylindraspis and 7 1 belonged to dodos which had been deposited within several centuries 4 000 years ago 127 Subsequent excavations suggested that dodos and other animals became mired in the Mare aux Songes while trying to reach water during a long period of severe drought about 4 200 years ago 126 Furthermore cyanobacteria thrived in the conditions created by the excrements of animals gathered around the swamp which died of intoxication dehydration trampling and miring 128 Though many small skeletal elements were found during the recent excavations of the swamp few were found during the 19th century probably owing to the employment of less refined methods when collecting 79 Louis Etienne Thirioux an amateur naturalist at Port Louis also found many dodo remains around 1900 from several locations They included the first articulated specimen which is the first subfossil dodo skeleton found outside the Mare aux Songes and the only remains of a juvenile specimen a now lost tarsometatarsus 22 37 The former specimen was found in 1904 in a cave near Le Pouce mountain and is the only known complete skeleton of an individual dodo Thirioux donated the specimen to the Museum Desjardins now Natural History Museum at Mauritius Institute 129 130 Thrioux s heirs sold a second mounted composite skeleton composed of at least two skeletons with a mainly reconstructed skull to the Durban Museum of Natural Science in South Africa in 1918 Together these two skeletons represent the most completely known dodo remains including bone elements previously unrecorded such as knee caps and wing bones Though some contemporary writers noted the importance of Thrioux s specimens they were not scientifically studied and were largely forgotten until 2011 when sought out by a group of researchers The mounted skeletons were laser scanned from which 3 D models were reconstructed which became the basis of a 2016 monograph about the osteology of the dodo 131 132 In 2006 explorers discovered a complete skeleton of a dodo in a lava cave in Mauritius This was only the second associated skeleton of an individual specimen ever found and the only one in recent times 133 Worldwide 26 museums have significant holdings of dodo material almost all found in the Mare aux Songes The Natural History Museum American Museum of Natural History Cambridge University Museum of Zoology the Senckenberg Museum and others have almost complete skeletons assembled from the dissociated subfossil remains of several individuals 134 In 2011 a wooden box containing dodo bones from the Edwardian era was rediscovered at the Grant Museum at University College London during preparations for a move They had been stored with crocodile bones until then 135 White dodo nbsp Savery s Landscape with Orpheus and the animals showing a whitish dodo in the lower right 1611 or later nbsp One of Pieter Holsteyn II s mid 17th century paintings of a white dodo possibly based on Savery s image The supposed white dodo or solitaire of Reunion is now considered an erroneous conjecture based on contemporary reports of the Reunion ibis and 17th century paintings of white dodo like birds by Pieter Withoos and Pieter Holsteyn that surfaced in the 19th century The confusion began when Willem Ysbrandtszoon Bontekoe who visited Reunion around 1619 mentioned fat flightless birds that he referred to as Dod eersen in his journal though without mentioning their colouration When the journal was published in 1646 it was accompanied by an engraving of a dodo from Savery s Crocker Art Gallery sketch 136 A white stocky and flightless bird was first mentioned as part of the Reunion fauna by Chief Officer J Tatton in 1625 Sporadic mentions were subsequently made by Sieur Dubois and other contemporary writers 137 Baron Edmond de Selys Longchamps coined the name Raphus solitarius for these birds in 1848 as he believed the accounts referred to a species of dodo When 17th century paintings of white dodos were discovered by 19th century naturalists it was assumed they depicted these birds Oudemans suggested that the discrepancy between the paintings and the old descriptions was that the paintings showed females and that the species was therefore sexually dimorphic 138 Some authors also believed the birds described were of a species similar to the Rodrigues solitaire as it was referred to by the same name or even that there were white species of both dodo and solitaire on the island 139 The Pieter Withoos painting which was discovered first appears to be based on an earlier painting by Pieter Holsteyn three versions of which are known to have existed According to Hume Cheke and Valledor de Lozoya it appears that all depictions of white dodos were based on Roelant Savery s painting Landscape with Orpheus and the animals or on copies of it The painting has generally been dated to 1611 though a post 1614 or even post 1626 date has also been proposed The painting shows a whitish specimen and was apparently based on a stuffed specimen then in Prague a walghvogel described as having a dirty off white colouring was mentioned in an inventory of specimens in the Prague collection of the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II to whom Savery was contracted at the time 1607 1611 Savery s several later images all show greyish birds possibly because he had by then seen another specimen Cheke and Hume believe the painted specimen was white owing to albinism 119 50 Valledor de Lozoya has instead suggested that the light plumage was a juvenile trait a result of bleaching of old taxidermy specimens or simply artistic license 140 In 1987 scientists described fossils of a recently extinct species of ibis from Reunion with a relatively short beak Borbonibis latipes before a connection to the solitaire reports had been made 141 Cheke suggested to one of the authors Francois Moutou that the fossils may have been of the Reunion solitaire and this suggestion was published in 1995 The ibis was reassigned to the genus Threskiornis now combined with the specific epithet solitarius from the binomial R solitarius 142 Birds of this genus are also white and black with slender beaks fitting the old descriptions of the Reunion solitaire No fossil remains of dodo like birds have ever been found on the island 119 Cultural significance nbsp nbsp Illustrations of Alice and the Dodo from Alice s Adventures in Wonderland by John Tenniel left 1865 and Arthur Rackham 1907 The dodo s significance as one of the best known extinct animals and its singular appearance led to its use in literature and popular culture as a symbol of an outdated concept or object as in the expression dead as a dodo which has come to mean unquestionably dead or obsolete Similarly the phrase to go the way of the dodo means to become extinct or obsolete to fall out of common usage or practice or to become a thing of the past 143 Dodo is also a slang term for a stupid dull witted person as it was said to be stupid and easily caught 144 145 The dodo appears frequently in works of popular fiction and even before its extinction it was featured in European literature as a symbol for exotic lands and of gluttony due to its apparent fatness 146 In 1865 the same year that George Clark started to publish reports about excavated dodo fossils the newly vindicated bird was featured as a character in Lewis Carroll s Alice s Adventures in Wonderland It is thought that he included the dodo because he identified with it and had adopted the name as a nickname for himself because of his stammer which made him accidentally introduce himself as Do do dodgson his legal surname 107 Carroll and the girl who served as inspiration for Alice Alice Liddell had enjoyed visiting the Oxford museum to see the dodo remains there 147 The book s popularity made the dodo a well known icon of extinction 148 Popular depictions of the dodo often became more exaggerated and cartoonish following its Alice in Wonderland fame which was in line with the inaccurate belief that it was clumsy tragic and destined for extinction 149 nbsp Coat of arms of Mauritius featuring a dodo as supporter nbsp Dodo on a 1971 Mauritius 10 Rupee The dodo is used as a mascot for many kinds of products especially in Mauritius 150 It appears as a supporter on the coat of arms of Mauritius on Mauritius coins is used as a watermark on all Mauritian rupee banknotes and features as the background of the Mauritian immigration form 93 151 152 A smiling dodo is the symbol of the Brasseries de Bourbon a popular brewer on Reunion whose emblem displays the white species once thought to have lived there 153 The dodo is used to promote the protection of endangered species by environmental organisations such as the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust and the Durrell Wildlife Park 154 The Center for Biological Diversity gives an annual Rubber Dodo Award to those who have done the most to destroy wild places species and biological diversity 155 In 2011 the nephiline spider Nephilengys dodo which inhabits the same woods as the dodo once did was named after the bird to raise awareness of the urgent need for protection of the Mauritius biota 156 Two species of ant from Mauritius have been named after the dodo Pseudolasius dodo in 1946 and Pheidole dodo in 2013 157 158 A species of isopod from a coral reef off Reunion was named Hansenium dodo in 1991 159 The name dodo has been used by scientists naming genetic elements honouring the dodo s flightless nature A fruitfly gene within a region of a chromosome required for flying ability was named dodo 160 In addition a defective transposable element family from Phytophthora infestans was named DodoPi as it contained mutations that eliminated the element s ability to jump to new locations in a chromosome 161 nbsp nbsp Previously unpublished 17th century illustration of a dodo sold in 2009 left and 19th century rogue taxidermy dodos by Rowland Ward in NHM right In 2009 a previously unpublished 17th century Dutch illustration of a dodo went for sale at Christie s and was expected to sell for 6 000 162 It is unknown whether the illustration was based on a specimen or on a previous image and the artist is unidentified It sold for 44 450 163 47 Parrish suggested it depicts a stuffed specimen as the legs look dried 164 The poet Hilaire Belloc included the following poem about the dodo in his Bad Child s Book of Beasts from 1896 The Dodo used to walk around And take the sun and air The sun yet warms his native ground The Dodo is not there The voice which used to squawk and squeak Is now for ever dumb Yet may you see his bones and beak All in the Mu se um 165 147 See alsoHolocene extinction List of African animals extinct in the Holocene List of extinct bird species since 1500References a b BirdLife International 2016 Raphus cucullatus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22690059A93259513 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22690059A93259513 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 a b c Hume J P Cheke Anthony S McOran Campbell A 2009 How Owen stole the Dodo Academic rivalry and disputed rights to a newly discovered subfossil deposit in nineteenth century Mauritius PDF Historical Biology 21 1 2 33 49 Bibcode 2009HBio 21 33H doi 10 1080 08912960903101868 S2CID 85743497 Archived PDF from the original on 21 March 2016 Retrieved 28 August 2015 Reinhardt Johannes Theodor 1842 1843 Nojere oplysning om det i Kjobenhavn fundne Drontehoved Naturhistorisk Tidsskrift in Danish IV 71 72 Baker R A 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Cheke amp Hume 2008 p 31 Bhookhun D P 2006 Mauritius Footprints From the Past allAfrica com Archived from the original on 2 October 2006 Retrieved 26 September 2006 subscription required pp 27 30 Pesticide Peddler Monsanto Wins 2015 Rubber Dodo Award Press release Center for Biological Diversity 5 November 2015 Archived from the original on 19 November 2015 Retrieved 18 November 2015 Kuntner M Agnarsson I May 2011 Biogeography and diversification of hermit spiders on Indian Ocean islands Nephilidae Nephilengys Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 59 2 477 488 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2011 02 002 PMID 21316478 Donisthorpe H S J K 1946 New species of ants Hym Formicidae from the island of Mauritius PDF Annals and Magazine of Natural History 12 95 776 782 doi 10 1080 00222934508654782 Archived PDF from the original on 12 August 2016 Retrieved 11 August 2016 Fischer G Fisher B L 2013 A revision of Pheidole Westwood Hymenoptera Formicidae in the islands of the Southwest Indian Ocean and designation of a neotype for the invasive Pheidole megacephala Zootaxa 3683 4 301 356 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 3683 4 1 PMID 25250457 S2CID 13149434 Muller H G 1991 Stenetriidae from coral reefs at Reunion Island southern Indian Ocean Description of three new species Senckenbergiana Biologica 71 4 6 303 318 Maleszka R Hanes S D Hackett R L De Couet H G Miklos G L 1996 The Drosophila melanogaster dodo dod gene conserved in humans is functionally interchangeable with the ESS1 cell division gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 93 1 447 451 Bibcode 1996PNAS 93 447M doi 10 1073 pnas 93 1 447 PMC 40255 PMID 8552658 Ah Fong A M V Judelson H S 2004 The hAT like DNA transposon DodoPi resides in a cluster of retro and DNA transposons in the stramenopile Phytophthora infestans Molecular Genetics and Genomics 271 5 577 585 doi 10 1007 s00438 004 1004 x PMID 15098122 S2CID 20240212 Jamieson Alastair 22 June 2009 Uncovered 350 year old picture of Dodo before it was extinct The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 November 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2012 Christie s 2009 Dutch School 17th Century A dodo Christies com Archived from the original on 17 January 2013 Retrieved 12 May 2012 Parish 2013 pp 104 105 Belloc H 1896 The Bad Child s Book of Beasts London Duckworth pp 27 30 Bibliography Parish Jolyon C 2013 The Dodo and the Solitaire A Natural History Bloomington US Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 00099 6 External links nbsp Look up dodo or go the way of the dodo in Wiktionary the free dictionary Painting the Dodo Two minute video about Julian Hume s modern interpretation of Roelant Savery s Dodo Dodo Bird Unboxing Seven minute video showing the Oxford specimen being taken out of storage and discussed Aves3D Raphus cucullatus Archived 13 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine Interactive 3D scans of various dodo elementsPortals nbsp Birds nbsp Animals nbsp Biology nbsp Africa nbsp Madagascar nbsp Paleontology 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