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Hoatzin

The hoatzin (/hˈætsɪn/ hoh-AT-sin)[note 1] or hoactzin (/hˈæktsɪn/ hoh-AKT-sin) (Opisthocomus hoazin)[4] is a species of tropical bird found in swamps, riparian forests, and mangroves of the Amazon and the Orinoco basins in South America. It is the only extant species in the genus Opisthocomus[5] which is the only extant genus in the Opisthocomidae family under the order of Opisthocomiformes.[6] The taxonomic position of this family has been greatly debated by specialists, and is still far from clear.

Hoatzin
Temporal range: Miocene–present
At Manu National Park, Peru
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Opisthocomiformes
Family: Opisthocomidae
Genus: Opisthocomus
Illiger, 1811
Species:
O. hoazin
Binomial name
Opisthocomus hoazin
(Müller, 1776)
Range
Synonyms

Phasianus hoazin Müller, 1776

The hoatzin is notable for its chicks having primitive claws on two of their wing digits; the species also is unique in possessing a digestive system capable of fermentation and the effective breaking-down of plant matter, a trait more commonly known from herbivorous ungulate-ruminant mammals and some primates. This bird is also the National bird of Guyana, the local name for this bird is the Canje Pheasant.

Description edit

 
At Lake Sandoval, Peru

The hoatzin is pheasant-sized, with a total length of 65 cm (26 in), and a long neck and small head. It has an unfeathered blue face with maroon eyes, and its head is topped by a spiky, rufous crest. The long, sooty-brown tail is bronze-green tipped with a broad whitish or buff band at the end.[7] The upper parts are dark, sooty brown-edged buff on the wing coverts, and streaked buff on the mantle and nape. The underparts are buff, while the crissum (the undertail coverts surrounding the cloaca), primaries, underwing coverts, and flanks are rich rufous-chestnut, but this is mainly visible when it opens its wings.

It is a noisy bird, and makes a variety of hoarse calls, including groans, croaks, hisses, and grunts.[5] These calls are often associated with body movements, such as wing spreading.

Young wing claws edit

Hoatzin chicks have two claws on each wing. Immediately on hatching, they can use these claws, and their oversized feet, to scramble around the tree branches without falling into the water.[8] When predators such as the great black hawk attack a hoatzin nesting colony, the adults fly noisily about, trying to divert the predator's attention, while the chicks move away from the nest and hide among the thickets. If discovered, however, they drop into the water and swim under the surface to escape, then later use their clawed wings to climb back to the safety of the nest. This has inevitably led to comparisons to the fossil bird Archaeopteryx, but the characteristic is rather an autapomorphy, possibly caused by an atavism toward the dinosaurian finger claws, whose developmental genetics ("blueprint") presumably is still in the avian genome. Since Archaeopteryx had three functional claws on each wing, some earlier systematists speculated that the hoatzin was descended from it, because nestling hoatzins have two functional claws on each wing. Modern researchers, however, hypothesize that the young hoatzin's claws are of more recent origin, and may be a secondary adaptation from its frequent need to leave the nest and climb about in dense vines and trees well before it can fly.[5] A similar trait is seen in turacos, where nestlings are using claws on their wings to climb in the trees.[9]

Taxonomy, systematics, and evolution edit

 
In Brazil

The generic name Opisthocomus comes from Ancient Greek ὄπισθοκομος ópisthokomos derived from ὄπισθε ópisthe (ὄπισθεν ópisthen before a consonant) "behind" and κόμη kómē "hair" altogether meaning "long hair behind" referring to its large crest.[5][10]

The hoatzin was originally described in 1776 by German zoologist Statius Müller. Much debate has occurred about the hoatzin's relationships with other birds. Because of its distinctness, it has been given its own family, the Opisthocomidae, and its own suborder, the Opisthocomi. At various times, it has been allied with such taxa as the tinamous, the Galliformes (gamebirds), the rails, the bustards, seriemas, sandgrouse, doves, turacos and other Cuculiformes, and mousebirds.[5] A whole genome sequencing study published in 2014 places the hoatzin as the sister taxon of a clade composed of Gruiformes (cranes) and Charadriiformes (plovers).[11]

In 2015, genetic research[12] indicated that the hoatzin is the last surviving member of a bird line that branched off in its own direction 64 million years ago, shortly after the extinction event that killed the nonavian dinosaurs.[13]

Fossil record edit

 
The newly hatched bird has claws on its thumb and first finger, enabling it to dexterously climb tree branches until its wings are strong enough for sustained flight.[14] These claws disappear by the time the bird reaches adulthood.

With respect to other material evidence, an undisputed fossil record of a close hoatzin relative is specimen UCMP 42823, a single cranium backside.[15] It is of Miocene origin[note 2] and was recovered in the upper Magdalena River Valley, Colombia, in the well-known fauna of La Venta.[5] This has been placed into a distinct, less derived genus, Hoazinoides, but clearly would be placed into the same family as the extant species. It markedly differs in that the cranium of the living hoatzin is characteristic, being much domed, rounded, and shortened, and that these autapomorphies were less pronounced in the Miocene bird. Müller discussed these findings in the light of the supposed affiliation of the hoatzins and the Galliformes, which was the favored hypothesis at that time but had been controversial almost since its inception. He cautioned, however, "that Hoazinoides by no means establishes a phyletic junction point with other galliforms" for obvious reasons, as we know today. Anything other than the primary findings of Müller are not to be expected in any case, as by the time of Hoazinoides, essentially all modern bird families are either known or believed to have been present and distinct. Going further back in time, the Late Eocene or Early Oligocene (some 34 Mya) Filholornis from France has also been considered "proof" of a link between the hoatzin and the gamebirds.[5] The fragmentary fossil Onychopteryx from the Eocene of Argentina[citation needed] and the quite complete, but no less enigmatic Early-Middle Eocene (Ypresian-Lutetian, some 48 Mya) Foro panarium are sometimes used[citation needed] to argue for a hoatzin-cuculiform (including turacos) link. As demonstrated above, though, this must be considered highly speculative, if not as badly off the mark as the relationship with the Cracidae discussed by Miller.

The earliest record of the order Opisthocomiformes is Protoazin parisiensis, from the latest Eocene (about 34 Mya) of Romainville, France. The holotype and only known specimen is NMB PG.70, consisting of partial coracoid, partial scapula, and partial pedal phalanx. According to the phylogenetic analysis performed by the authors, Namibiavis, although later, is more basal than Protoazin. Opisthocomiforms seem to have been much more widespread in the past, with the present South American distribution being only a relic. By the Early to Middle Miocene, they were probably extinct in Europe already, as formations dated to this time and representing fluvial or lacustrine palaeoenvironments, in which the hoatzin thrives today, have yielded dozens of bird specimens, but no opisthocomiforms. A possible explanation to account for the extinction of Protoazin between the Late Eocene and the Early Miocene in Europe, and of Namibiavis after the Middle Miocene of sub-Saharan Africa is the arrival of arboreal carnivorans—predation which could have had a devastating effect on the local opisthocomiforms, if they were as poor flyers and had similarly vulnerable nesting strategies as today's hoatzins. Felids and viverrids first arrived in Europe from Asia after the Turgai Sea closed, marking the boundary between the Eocene and the Oligocene. None of these predators, and for the matter, no placental predator at all was present in South America before the Great American Interchange 3 Mya, which could explain the survival of the hoatzin there.[16] In addition to being the earliest fossil record of an opisthocomiform, Protoazin was also the earliest find of one (1912), but it was forgotten for more than a century, being described only in 2014.

Hoazinavis is an extinct genus of early opisthocomiforms from Late Oligocene and Early Miocene (about 24–22 Mya) deposits of Brazil. It was collected in 2008 from the Tremembé Formation of São Paulo, Brazil. It was first named by Gerald Mayr, Herculano Alvarenga and Cécile Mourer-Chauviré in 2011 and the type species is Hoazinavis lacustris.[17]

Namibiavis is another extinct genus of early opisthocomiforms from early Middle Miocene (around 16 Mya) deposits of Namibia. It was collected from Arrisdrift, southern Namibia. It was first named by Cécile Mourer-Chauviré in 2003 and the type species is Namibiavis senutae.[17]

Behavior edit

 
In flight, Bolivia

Feeding and habits edit

The hoatzin is a folivore—it eats the leaves (and to a lesser degree, the fruits and flowers) of the plants that grow in its marshy and riverine habitat. It clambers around (somewhat clumsily) along the branches in its search for food. The hoatzin uses a leathery “bump” on the bottom of its crop to help balance its weight on the branches. The species was once thought to eat the leaves of only arums and mangroves, but the species is now known to consume the leaves of more than 50 botanical species. One study, undertaken in Venezuela, found that the hoatzin's diet was 82% leaves, 10% flowers, and 8% fruit.[5] Any feeding on insects or other animal matter is purely opportunistic or accidental.[18]

One of this species' many peculiarities is its unique digestive system, which contains specialized bacteria in the front part of the gut that break-down and ferment the foliar material they consume (much like cattle and other ruminants do). This process is more efficient than what has been measured in many other species of birds, with up to 70% of the plant fiber being digested.[8][19][20] Unlike ruminants, however, which possess a rumen (a specialized, chambered stomach for bacterial fermentation), the hoatzin has an unusually large crop that is folded into two chambers, with a large, multi-chambered lower esophagus.

Serrations on the beak help cut leaves into smaller pieces before they are swallowed. Because they lack the teeth of mammals, hoatzins don't regurgitate their food, or chew the cud; instead, a combination of muscular pressure and abrasion by a “cornified” lining of the crop is used as an equivalent to remastication, allowing fermentation and trituration to occur at the same site. The fermented foliage produces methane which the bird expels through burping. Its stomach chamber and gizzard are much smaller than in other birds. Its crop is so large as to displace the flight muscles and keel of the sternum, much to the detriment of its flight capacity. The crop is supported by a thickened skin callus on the tip of the sternum, which helps the bird support the crop on a branch during rest and while digesting its food. A hoatzin's meal takes up to 45 hours to pass through its body. [19][21][22][23] With a body weight as low as 700 grams (1.5 lb), the adult hoatzin is the smallest known animal with foregut fermentation (the lower limit for mammals is about 3 kilograms or 6.6 pounds).[24]

Because of aromatic compounds in the leaves they consume, and the bacterial fermentation required to digest them,[25][26] the birds have a disagreeable, manure-like odor and are only hunted by humans for food in times of dire need; local people also call it the "stinkbird" because of it.[8] Much of the hoatzin’s diet, including various types of Monstera, Philodendron and other aroids, contains a high concentration of calcium oxalate crystals, which, even in small amounts, can be greatly uncomfortable (and even dangerous) for humans to consume.

Breeding edit

Hoatzins are seasonal breeders, breeding during the rainy season, the exact timing of which varies across their range.[5] Hoatzins are gregarious and nest in small colonies, laying two or three eggs in a stick nest in a tree hanging over water in seasonally flooded forests. The chicks are fed on regurgitated fermented food.

Relationship with humans edit

In Brazil, indigenous peoples sometimes collect the eggs for food, and the adults are occasionally hunted, but it is generally rare to consume mature birds, as hoatzin meat is reputed to have a bad taste.[5][27] Its preferred habitats of forests and inland wetlands are threatened by Amazonian deforestation. The hoatzin is believed to remain fairly common in a large part of its range, but its population is likely decreasing due to habitat loss.[1] The hoatzin is the national bird of Guyana.[28]

See also edit

  • The turaco, a convergently evolved bird in the order Musophagiformes, is a large-crested, arboreal, mainly herbivorous bird whose nestlings also use wing claws for climbing.[29]

Notes edit

  1. ^ US also /ˈwɑːtsɪn, -sn/ WAHT-sin, -⁠seen[2][3]
  2. ^ Originally believed to be of Late Miocene age—from some 5–10 million years ago (Mya)—the bone was found in association with fossils of the extinct monkey Cebupithecia sarmientoi that today, usually is considered to be of the Early or Middle Miocene, possibly 18 but from at least some 12 Mya.

References edit

  1. ^ a b BirdLife International (2016). "Opisthocomus hoazin". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T22684428A93028795. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T22684428A93028795.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Definition of hoatzin". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
  3. ^ . Lexico Dictionaries. Lexico. Archived from the original on February 14, 2022. Retrieved 2022-02-14.
  4. ^ "hoatzin". The Chambers Dictionary (9th ed.). Chambers. 2003. ISBN 0-550-10105-5.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Thomas, B. T. (1996). "Family Opisthocomidae (Hoatzins)". In Josep, del Hoyo; Andrew, Jordi; Sargatal, Christie (eds.). Handbook of the Birds of the World. Volume 3, Hoatzins to Auks. Barcelona: Lynx Edicions. pp. 24–32. ISBN 978-84-87334-20-7.
  6. ^ Gill, Frank; Donsker, David; Rasmussen, Pamela, eds. (January 2023). "Hoatzin, New World vultures, Secretarybird, raptors". IOC World Bird List Version 13.1. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 12 March 2023.
  7. ^ Williams, Kellie (2001). "Opisthocomus hoazin". Animal Diversity Web. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. Retrieved 12 March 2023.
  8. ^ a b c Jackson, Tom (2015). DK Eyewitness Books: The Amazon. New York, USA: DK Publishing. p. 21. ISBN 978-1-4654-3566-8.
  9. ^ Birds of the World
  10. ^ Jobling, James A. (2010). Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London, UK: Christopher Helm. p. 282. ISBN 978-1-4081-3326-2. OCLC 659731768.
  11. ^ Jarvis, E.D.; et al. (2014). "Whole-genome analyses resolve early branches in the tree of life of modern birds". Science. 346 (6215): 1320–1331. Bibcode:2014Sci...346.1320J. doi:10.1126/science.1253451. PMC 4405904. PMID 25504713.
  12. ^ Prum, Richard O.; Berv, Jacob S.; Dornburg, Alex; Field, Daniel J.; Townsend, Jeffrey P.; Lemmon, Emily Moriarty; Lemmon, Alan R. (7 October 2015). "A comprehensive phylogeny of birds (Aves) using targeted next-generation DNA sequencing". Nature. 526 (7574): 569–573. Bibcode:2015Natur.526..569P. doi:10.1038/nature15697. PMID 26444237. S2CID 205246158.
  13. ^ Timmer, John (8 October 2015). "New study rearranges family tree of birds". Ars Technica. Condé Nast. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  14. ^ Parker, W. K. (1891). "On the Morphology of a Reptilian Bird, Opisthocomus hoazin". Transactions of the Zoological Society of London. 13 (2): 43–89. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1891.tb00045.x.
  15. ^ Miller, Alden H. (1953). "A fossil Hoatzin from the Miocene of Colombia" (PDF). Auk. 70 (4): 484–495. doi:10.2307/4081360. JSTOR 4081360.
  16. ^ Gerald Mayr; Vanesa L. De Pietri (2014). "Earliest and first Northern Hemispheric hoatzin fossils substantiate Old World origin of a "Neotropic endemic"". Naturwissenschaften. 101 (2): 143–8. Bibcode:2014NW....101..143M. doi:10.1007/s00114-014-1144-8. PMID 24441712. S2CID 14060583.
  17. ^ a b Mayr, Gerald; Alvarenga, Herculano; Mourer-Chauviré, Cécile (2011). "Out of Africa: Fossils shed light on the origin of the hoatzin, an iconic Neotropic bird". Naturwissenschaften. 98 (11): 961–966. Bibcode:2011NW.....98..961M. doi:10.1007/s00114-011-0849-1. PMID 21964974. S2CID 24210185.
  18. ^ Grajal, A.; Strahl, S. D.; Parra, R.; Dominguez, M. G.; Neher, A. (1989). "Foregut fermentation in the Hoatzin, a Neotropical leaf-eating bird". Science. 245 (4923): 1236–1238. Bibcode:1989Sci...245.1236G. doi:10.1126/science.245.4923.1236. PMID 17747887. S2CID 21455374..
  19. ^ a b Parry, James (n.d.). "Why does the hoatzin or 'stink bird' stink?". Discover Wildlife. Our Media Ltd. Retrieved 12 March 2023.
  20. ^ "Strange Bird Must Think It's a Cow". The New York Times. 1995-09-19. from the original on 2015-05-26. Retrieved 2023-11-25.
  21. ^ Müllner, Antje (2004). Breeding Ecology and Related Life-History Traits of the Hoatzin, Opisthocomus hoazin, in a Primary Rainforest Habitat (PhD thesis). Würzburg, Germany: Julius Maximilian University of Würzburg. Retrieved 25 November 2023 – via Deutsche Nationalbibliothek.
  22. ^ Pallardy, Richard (9 November 2018). "Dirty birdies: The case of the stinking bird". earth.com. Retrieved 25 November 2023.
  23. ^ Grajal, Alejandro (1995). "Structure and Function of the Digestive Tract of the Hoatzin (Opisthocomus hoazin): A Folivorous Bird with Foregut Fermentation" (PDF). The Auk. 112 (1): 20–28. doi:10.2307/4088763. JSTOR 4088763. Retrieved 25 November 2023 – via Searchable Ornithological Research Archive, The University of New Mexico.
  24. ^ Godoy-Vitorino, F.; Ley, R.E.; Gao, Z.; Pei, Z.; Ortiz-Zuazaga, H.; Pericchi, L.R.; Garcia-Amado, M.A.; Michelangeli, F.; Blaser, M.J.; Gordon, J.I.; Domínguez-Bello, M.G. (2008). "Bacterial Community in the Crop of the Hoatzin, a Neotropical Folivorous Flying Bird". Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 74 (19): 5905–5912. Bibcode:2008ApEnM..74.5905G. doi:10.1128/aem.00574-08. PMC 2565963. PMID 18689523.
  25. ^ Wright, A.-D. G.; Northwood, K. S.; Obispo, N. E. (2009). "Rumen-like methanogens identified from the crop of the folivorous South American bird, the hoatzin (Opisthocomus hoazin)". The ISME Journal. 3 (10): 1120–1126. Bibcode:2009ISMEJ...3.1120W. doi:10.1038/ismej.2009.41. PMID 19387486.
  26. ^ Godoy-Vitorino, F.; Goldfarb, K. C.; Karaoz, U.; et al. (2011). "Comparative analyses of foregut and hindgut bacterial communities in hoatzins and cows". The ISME Journal. 6 (3): 531–541. doi:10.1038/ismej.2011.131. PMC 3280141. PMID 21938024.
  27. ^ "Hoatzin Opisthocomus hoazin". BirdLife International. 2004.
  28. ^ "Guyana National Symbols". Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  29. ^ Fain, Matthew G.; Houde, Peter (2004). (PDF). Evolution. 58 (11): 2558–2573. doi:10.1554/04-235. PMID 15612298. S2CID 1296408. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-07-09. Retrieved 2016-07-08.

External links edit

  • Cornell Lab of Ornithology: Mystery Birds: Hoatzin Adults and Young. Retrieved 2008-JUN-16.
  • Hoatzin videos, photos & sounds on the Internet Bird Collection.

hoatzin, hoatzin, note, hoactzin, opisthocomus, hoazin, species, tropical, bird, found, swamps, riparian, forests, mangroves, amazon, orinoco, basins, south, america, only, extant, species, genus, opisthocomus, which, only, extant, genus, opisthocomidae, famil. The hoatzin h oʊ ˈ ae t s ɪ n hoh AT sin note 1 or hoactzin h oʊ ˈ ae k t s ɪ n hoh AKT sin Opisthocomus hoazin 4 is a species of tropical bird found in swamps riparian forests and mangroves of the Amazon and the Orinoco basins in South America It is the only extant species in the genus Opisthocomus 5 which is the only extant genus in the Opisthocomidae family under the order of Opisthocomiformes 6 The taxonomic position of this family has been greatly debated by specialists and is still far from clear HoatzinTemporal range Miocene present PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NAt Manu National Park Peru source source Conservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder OpisthocomiformesFamily OpisthocomidaeGenus OpisthocomusIlliger 1811Species O hoazinBinomial nameOpisthocomus hoazin Muller 1776 RangeSynonymsPhasianus hoazin Muller 1776The hoatzin is notable for its chicks having primitive claws on two of their wing digits the species also is unique in possessing a digestive system capable of fermentation and the effective breaking down of plant matter a trait more commonly known from herbivorous ungulate ruminant mammals and some primates This bird is also the National bird of Guyana the local name for this bird is the Canje Pheasant Contents 1 Description 1 1 Young wing claws 2 Taxonomy systematics and evolution 2 1 Fossil record 3 Behavior 3 1 Feeding and habits 3 2 Breeding 4 Relationship with humans 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksDescription edit nbsp At Lake Sandoval PeruThe hoatzin is pheasant sized with a total length of 65 cm 26 in and a long neck and small head It has an unfeathered blue face with maroon eyes and its head is topped by a spiky rufous crest The long sooty brown tail is bronze green tipped with a broad whitish or buff band at the end 7 The upper parts are dark sooty brown edged buff on the wing coverts and streaked buff on the mantle and nape The underparts are buff while the crissum the undertail coverts surrounding the cloaca primaries underwing coverts and flanks are rich rufous chestnut but this is mainly visible when it opens its wings It is a noisy bird and makes a variety of hoarse calls including groans croaks hisses and grunts 5 These calls are often associated with body movements such as wing spreading Young wing claws edit Hoatzin chicks have two claws on each wing Immediately on hatching they can use these claws and their oversized feet to scramble around the tree branches without falling into the water 8 When predators such as the great black hawk attack a hoatzin nesting colony the adults fly noisily about trying to divert the predator s attention while the chicks move away from the nest and hide among the thickets If discovered however they drop into the water and swim under the surface to escape then later use their clawed wings to climb back to the safety of the nest This has inevitably led to comparisons to the fossil bird Archaeopteryx but the characteristic is rather an autapomorphy possibly caused by an atavism toward the dinosaurian finger claws whose developmental genetics blueprint presumably is still in the avian genome Since Archaeopteryx had three functional claws on each wing some earlier systematists speculated that the hoatzin was descended from it because nestling hoatzins have two functional claws on each wing Modern researchers however hypothesize that the young hoatzin s claws are of more recent origin and may be a secondary adaptation from its frequent need to leave the nest and climb about in dense vines and trees well before it can fly 5 A similar trait is seen in turacos where nestlings are using claws on their wings to climb in the trees 9 Taxonomy systematics and evolution edit nbsp In BrazilThe generic name Opisthocomus comes from Ancient Greek ὄpis8okomos opisthokomos derived from ὄpis8e opisthe ὄpis8en opisthen before a consonant behind and komh kome hair altogether meaning long hair behind referring to its large crest 5 10 The hoatzin was originally described in 1776 by German zoologist Statius Muller Much debate has occurred about the hoatzin s relationships with other birds Because of its distinctness it has been given its own family the Opisthocomidae and its own suborder the Opisthocomi At various times it has been allied with such taxa as the tinamous the Galliformes gamebirds the rails the bustards seriemas sandgrouse doves turacos and other Cuculiformes and mousebirds 5 A whole genome sequencing study published in 2014 places the hoatzin as the sister taxon of a clade composed of Gruiformes cranes and Charadriiformes plovers 11 In 2015 genetic research 12 indicated that the hoatzin is the last surviving member of a bird line that branched off in its own direction 64 million years ago shortly after the extinction event that killed the nonavian dinosaurs 13 Fossil record edit nbsp The newly hatched bird has claws on its thumb and first finger enabling it to dexterously climb tree branches until its wings are strong enough for sustained flight 14 These claws disappear by the time the bird reaches adulthood With respect to other material evidence an undisputed fossil record of a close hoatzin relative is specimen UCMP 42823 a single cranium backside 15 It is of Miocene origin note 2 and was recovered in the upper Magdalena River Valley Colombia in the well known fauna of La Venta 5 This has been placed into a distinct less derived genus Hoazinoides but clearly would be placed into the same family as the extant species It markedly differs in that the cranium of the living hoatzin is characteristic being much domed rounded and shortened and that these autapomorphies were less pronounced in the Miocene bird Muller discussed these findings in the light of the supposed affiliation of the hoatzins and the Galliformes which was the favored hypothesis at that time but had been controversial almost since its inception He cautioned however that Hoazinoides by no means establishes a phyletic junction point with other galliforms for obvious reasons as we know today Anything other than the primary findings of Muller are not to be expected in any case as by the time of Hoazinoides essentially all modern bird families are either known or believed to have been present and distinct Going further back in time the Late Eocene or Early Oligocene some 34 Mya Filholornis from France has also been considered proof of a link between the hoatzin and the gamebirds 5 The fragmentary fossil Onychopteryx from the Eocene of Argentina citation needed and the quite complete but no less enigmatic Early Middle Eocene Ypresian Lutetian some 48 Mya Foro panarium are sometimes used citation needed to argue for a hoatzin cuculiform including turacos link As demonstrated above though this must be considered highly speculative if not as badly off the mark as the relationship with the Cracidae discussed by Miller The earliest record of the order Opisthocomiformes is Protoazin parisiensis from the latest Eocene about 34 Mya of Romainville France The holotype and only known specimen is NMB PG 70 consisting of partial coracoid partial scapula and partial pedal phalanx According to the phylogenetic analysis performed by the authors Namibiavis although later is more basal than Protoazin Opisthocomiforms seem to have been much more widespread in the past with the present South American distribution being only a relic By the Early to Middle Miocene they were probably extinct in Europe already as formations dated to this time and representing fluvial or lacustrine palaeoenvironments in which the hoatzin thrives today have yielded dozens of bird specimens but no opisthocomiforms A possible explanation to account for the extinction of Protoazin between the Late Eocene and the Early Miocene in Europe and of Namibiavis after the Middle Miocene of sub Saharan Africa is the arrival of arboreal carnivorans predation which could have had a devastating effect on the local opisthocomiforms if they were as poor flyers and had similarly vulnerable nesting strategies as today s hoatzins Felids and viverrids first arrived in Europe from Asia after the Turgai Sea closed marking the boundary between the Eocene and the Oligocene None of these predators and for the matter no placental predator at all was present in South America before the Great American Interchange 3 Mya which could explain the survival of the hoatzin there 16 In addition to being the earliest fossil record of an opisthocomiform Protoazin was also the earliest find of one 1912 but it was forgotten for more than a century being described only in 2014 Hoazinavis is an extinct genus of early opisthocomiforms from Late Oligocene and Early Miocene about 24 22 Mya deposits of Brazil It was collected in 2008 from the Tremembe Formation of Sao Paulo Brazil It was first named by Gerald Mayr Herculano Alvarenga and Cecile Mourer Chauvire in 2011 and the type species is Hoazinavis lacustris 17 Namibiavis is another extinct genus of early opisthocomiforms from early Middle Miocene around 16 Mya deposits of Namibia It was collected from Arrisdrift southern Namibia It was first named by Cecile Mourer Chauvire in 2003 and the type species is Namibiavis senutae 17 Behavior edit nbsp In flight BoliviaFeeding and habits edit The hoatzin is a folivore it eats the leaves and to a lesser degree the fruits and flowers of the plants that grow in its marshy and riverine habitat It clambers around somewhat clumsily along the branches in its search for food The hoatzin uses a leathery bump on the bottom of its crop to help balance its weight on the branches The species was once thought to eat the leaves of only arums and mangroves but the species is now known to consume the leaves of more than 50 botanical species One study undertaken in Venezuela found that the hoatzin s diet was 82 leaves 10 flowers and 8 fruit 5 Any feeding on insects or other animal matter is purely opportunistic or accidental 18 One of this species many peculiarities is its unique digestive system which contains specialized bacteria in the front part of the gut that break down and ferment the foliar material they consume much like cattle and other ruminants do This process is more efficient than what has been measured in many other species of birds with up to 70 of the plant fiber being digested 8 19 20 Unlike ruminants however which possess a rumen a specialized chambered stomach for bacterial fermentation the hoatzin has an unusually large crop that is folded into two chambers with a large multi chambered lower esophagus Serrations on the beak help cut leaves into smaller pieces before they are swallowed Because they lack the teeth of mammals hoatzins don t regurgitate their food or chew the cud instead a combination of muscular pressure and abrasion by a cornified lining of the crop is used as an equivalent to remastication allowing fermentation and trituration to occur at the same site The fermented foliage produces methane which the bird expels through burping Its stomach chamber and gizzard are much smaller than in other birds Its crop is so large as to displace the flight muscles and keel of the sternum much to the detriment of its flight capacity The crop is supported by a thickened skin callus on the tip of the sternum which helps the bird support the crop on a branch during rest and while digesting its food A hoatzin s meal takes up to 45 hours to pass through its body 19 21 22 23 With a body weight as low as 700 grams 1 5 lb the adult hoatzin is the smallest known animal with foregut fermentation the lower limit for mammals is about 3 kilograms or 6 6 pounds 24 Because of aromatic compounds in the leaves they consume and the bacterial fermentation required to digest them 25 26 the birds have a disagreeable manure like odor and are only hunted by humans for food in times of dire need local people also call it the stinkbird because of it 8 Much of the hoatzin s diet including various types of Monstera Philodendron and other aroids contains a high concentration of calcium oxalate crystals which even in small amounts can be greatly uncomfortable and even dangerous for humans to consume Breeding edit Hoatzins are seasonal breeders breeding during the rainy season the exact timing of which varies across their range 5 Hoatzins are gregarious and nest in small colonies laying two or three eggs in a stick nest in a tree hanging over water in seasonally flooded forests The chicks are fed on regurgitated fermented food Relationship with humans editIn Brazil indigenous peoples sometimes collect the eggs for food and the adults are occasionally hunted but it is generally rare to consume mature birds as hoatzin meat is reputed to have a bad taste 5 27 Its preferred habitats of forests and inland wetlands are threatened by Amazonian deforestation The hoatzin is believed to remain fairly common in a large part of its range but its population is likely decreasing due to habitat loss 1 The hoatzin is the national bird of Guyana 28 See also editThe turaco a convergently evolved bird in the order Musophagiformes is a large crested arboreal mainly herbivorous bird whose nestlings also use wing claws for climbing 29 Notes edit US also ˈ w ɑː t s ɪ n s iː n WAHT sin seen 2 3 Originally believed to be of Late Miocene age from some 5 10 million years ago Mya the bone was found in association with fossils of the extinct monkey Cebupithecia sarmientoi that today usually is considered to be of the Early or Middle Miocene possibly 18 but from at least some 12 Mya References edit a b BirdLife International 2016 Opisthocomus hoazin IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22684428A93028795 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22684428A93028795 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Definition of hoatzin Dictionary com Retrieved 14 February 2022 HOATZIN English Definition and Meaning Lexico Dictionaries Lexico Archived from the original on February 14 2022 Retrieved 2022 02 14 hoatzin The Chambers Dictionary 9th ed Chambers 2003 ISBN 0 550 10105 5 a b c d e f g h i j Thomas B T 1996 Family Opisthocomidae Hoatzins In Josep del Hoyo Andrew Jordi Sargatal Christie eds Handbook of the Birds of the World Volume 3 Hoatzins to Auks Barcelona Lynx Edicions pp 24 32 ISBN 978 84 87334 20 7 Gill Frank Donsker David Rasmussen Pamela eds January 2023 Hoatzin New World vultures Secretarybird raptors IOC World Bird List Version 13 1 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 12 March 2023 Williams Kellie 2001 Opisthocomus hoazin Animal Diversity Web University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Retrieved 12 March 2023 a b c Jackson Tom 2015 DK Eyewitness Books The Amazon New York USA DK Publishing p 21 ISBN 978 1 4654 3566 8 Birds of the World Jobling James A 2010 Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London UK Christopher Helm p 282 ISBN 978 1 4081 3326 2 OCLC 659731768 Jarvis E D et al 2014 Whole genome analyses resolve early branches in the tree of life of modern birds Science 346 6215 1320 1331 Bibcode 2014Sci 346 1320J doi 10 1126 science 1253451 PMC 4405904 PMID 25504713 Prum Richard O Berv Jacob S Dornburg Alex Field Daniel J Townsend Jeffrey P Lemmon Emily Moriarty Lemmon Alan R 7 October 2015 A comprehensive phylogeny of birds Aves using targeted next generation DNA sequencing Nature 526 7574 569 573 Bibcode 2015Natur 526 569P doi 10 1038 nature15697 PMID 26444237 S2CID 205246158 Timmer John 8 October 2015 New study rearranges family tree of birds Ars Technica Conde Nast Retrieved 25 March 2023 Parker W K 1891 On the Morphology of a Reptilian Bird Opisthocomus hoazin Transactions of the Zoological Society of London 13 2 43 89 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1891 tb00045 x Miller Alden H 1953 A fossil Hoatzin from the Miocene of Colombia PDF Auk 70 4 484 495 doi 10 2307 4081360 JSTOR 4081360 Gerald Mayr Vanesa L De Pietri 2014 Earliest and first Northern Hemispheric hoatzin fossils substantiate Old World origin of a Neotropic endemic Naturwissenschaften 101 2 143 8 Bibcode 2014NW 101 143M doi 10 1007 s00114 014 1144 8 PMID 24441712 S2CID 14060583 a b Mayr Gerald Alvarenga Herculano Mourer Chauvire Cecile 2011 Out of Africa Fossils shed light on the origin of the hoatzin an iconic Neotropic bird Naturwissenschaften 98 11 961 966 Bibcode 2011NW 98 961M doi 10 1007 s00114 011 0849 1 PMID 21964974 S2CID 24210185 Grajal A Strahl S D Parra R Dominguez M G Neher A 1989 Foregut fermentation in the Hoatzin a Neotropical leaf eating bird Science 245 4923 1236 1238 Bibcode 1989Sci 245 1236G doi 10 1126 science 245 4923 1236 PMID 17747887 S2CID 21455374 a b Parry James n d Why does the hoatzin or stink bird stink Discover Wildlife Our Media Ltd Retrieved 12 March 2023 Strange Bird Must Think It s a Cow The New York Times 1995 09 19 Archived from the original on 2015 05 26 Retrieved 2023 11 25 Mullner Antje 2004 Breeding Ecology and Related Life History Traits of the Hoatzin Opisthocomus hoazin in a Primary Rainforest Habitat PhD thesis Wurzburg Germany Julius Maximilian University of Wurzburg Retrieved 25 November 2023 via Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Pallardy Richard 9 November 2018 Dirty birdies The case of the stinking bird earth com Retrieved 25 November 2023 Grajal Alejandro 1995 Structure and Function of the Digestive Tract of the Hoatzin Opisthocomus hoazin A Folivorous Bird with Foregut Fermentation PDF The Auk 112 1 20 28 doi 10 2307 4088763 JSTOR 4088763 Retrieved 25 November 2023 via Searchable Ornithological Research Archive The University of New Mexico Godoy Vitorino F Ley R E Gao Z Pei Z Ortiz Zuazaga H Pericchi L R Garcia Amado M A Michelangeli F Blaser M J Gordon J I Dominguez Bello M G 2008 Bacterial Community in the Crop of the Hoatzin a Neotropical Folivorous Flying Bird Applied and Environmental Microbiology 74 19 5905 5912 Bibcode 2008ApEnM 74 5905G doi 10 1128 aem 00574 08 PMC 2565963 PMID 18689523 Wright A D G Northwood K S Obispo N E 2009 Rumen like methanogens identified from the crop of the folivorous South American bird the hoatzin Opisthocomus hoazin The ISME Journal 3 10 1120 1126 Bibcode 2009ISMEJ 3 1120W doi 10 1038 ismej 2009 41 PMID 19387486 Godoy Vitorino F Goldfarb K C Karaoz U et al 2011 Comparative analyses of foregut and hindgut bacterial communities in hoatzins and cows The ISME Journal 6 3 531 541 doi 10 1038 ismej 2011 131 PMC 3280141 PMID 21938024 Hoatzin Opisthocomus hoazin BirdLife International 2004 Guyana National Symbols Retrieved 28 January 2014 Fain Matthew G Houde Peter 2004 Parallel radiations in the primary clades of birds PDF Evolution 58 11 2558 2573 doi 10 1554 04 235 PMID 15612298 S2CID 1296408 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 07 09 Retrieved 2016 07 08 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Opisthocomus hoazin Cornell Lab of Ornithology Mystery Birds Hoatzin Adults and Young Retrieved 2008 JUN 16 Hoatzin videos photos amp sounds on the Internet Bird Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hoatzin amp oldid 1199952196, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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