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List of Madagascar and Indian Ocean Island animals extinct in the Holocene

This is a list of Madagascar and Indian Ocean Island animals extinct in the Holocene that covers extinctions from the Holocene epoch, a geologic epoch that began about 11,650 years before present (about 9700 BCE)[a] and continues to the present day.[1]

Life restoration of a large sloth lemur (Palaeopropithecus ingens).

The Republic of Madagascar is a large island country in the Indian Ocean, off the coast of East Africa. Other Indian Ocean islands near Madagascar include the Mascarene Islands (split between the Republic of Mauritius and the French department of Réunion), the Republic of Seychelles, and the Comoro Islands (split between the Union of Comoros and the French department of Mayotte).

Madagascar and the Indian Ocean islands are a biodiversity hotspot. The wildlife of Madagascar evolved in isolation and is distinct from the wildlife of Africa and other continents. Approximately 90 percent of all plant and animal species found in Madagascar are endemic.[2] Lemurs are endemic to the island of Madagascar.

Numerous animal species have disappeared from Madagascar and the Indian Ocean islands as part of the ongoing Holocene extinction, driven by human activity. The famous dodo (Raphus cucullatus), last seen in 1662, was endemic to Mauritius.[3] All 17 extinct lemurs were giant lemurs larger than the extant lemurs.

The subfossil remains of certain avian orders are scarce on Réunion. Consequently, a few of the extinct birds from Réunion are hypothetical species. They almost certainly existed but lack supporting subfossil remains.[4]

Locally extinct native species are included below, but human-introduced species that were later wiped out are not included.

Mammals (class Mammalia)

Afrosoricidans (order Afrosoricida)

Tenrecs (family Tenrecidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
MacPhee's shrew tenrec Microgale macpheei Southeastern Madagascar Only known from cave remains dated to 790-410 BCE.[5]

Incertae familiae

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Smaller bibymalagasy Plesiorycteropus germainepetterae Madagascar
Larger bibymalagasy Plesiorycteropus madagascariensis Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 865-965 AD.[6]  

Primates (order Primates)

Aye-ayes (family Daubentoniidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Giant aye-aye Daubentonia robusta Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 900-1150 AD.[7]

Koala lemurs (family Megaladapidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Megaladapis edwardsi Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1300-1430 AD.[7]  
Megaladapis grandidieri Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 980-1170 AD.[7]  
Megaladapis madagascariensis Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1206-1427 AD.[8]  

Lemurids (family Lemuridae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Giant ruffed lemur Pachylemur insignis Southwestern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 890-990 AD.[8]  
Giant ruffed lemur Pachylemur jullyi Central Madagascar

Monkey lemurs (family Archaeolemuridae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Archaeolemur edwardsii Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1047-1280 AD.[9]  
Archaeolemur majori Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 650-780 AD.[9]  
Hadropithecus stenognathus Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 535-876 AD.[7]  

Sloth lemurs (family Palaeopropithecidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Mesopropithecus dolichobrachion Northern Madagascar
Mesopropithecus globiceps Southwestern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 245-429 AD.[9]  
Mesopropithecus pithecoides Central Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 600-765 AD.[8]
Babakotia radofilai Northern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 3340-2890 BCE.[9]  
Palaeopropithecus ingens Southwestern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1320-1630 AD.[7]  
Palaeopropithecus kelyus Northern Madagascar
Palaeopropithecus maximus Central Madagascar  
Archaeoindris fontoynontii Central Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 412-199 BCE.[9]  

Rodents (order Rodentia)

Nesomyids (family Nesomyidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Brachytarsomys mahajambaensis Northern coast of Madagascar
Hypogeomys australis Southeastern and central Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 428-618 AD.[9] There was no range overlap with its living relative, the Malagasy giant rat.[10]  
Nesomys narindaensis Northern coast of Madagascar

Bats (order Chiroptera)

Megabats (family Pteropodidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Small Mauritian flying fox Pteropus subniger Mauritius and Réunion Last recorded in Mauritius in 1859, and in Réunion in 1862. Extinction might have been caused by hunting and deforestation.[11]  

Family Rhinonycteridae

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Triaenops goodmani Northern Madagascar Described from three mandibles found in a cave, 10,000 years old or younger.[12] The two other extant species of the genus Triaenops in Madagascar were later moved to Paratriaenops.[13]  

Family Hipposideridae

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Hipposideros besaoka Northern Madagascar Known from numerous jawbones and isolated teeth 10,000 years old or younger.[12]  

Carnivorans (order Carnivora)

Malagasy carnivorans (family Eupleridae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Giant fossa Cryptoprocta spelea Madagascar Most recent remains were dated to 210 AD.[14] The species, or a folk memory may have survived for longer: Étienne de Flacourt wrote in 1658 that a leopard-like carnivore more powerful than the extant fossa, capable of killing calves and humans, could be found in remote mountain areas.[15][16] Malagasy people also distinguish two fossa species: the red fossa (fosa mena) and the larger black fossa (fosa mainty).[15]  

Even-toed ungulates (order Artiodactyla)

Hippopotamids (family Hippopotamidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Malagasy hippopotamus Hippopotamus laloumena Eastern and northern Madagascar Most recent remains, of questionable provenance, were dated to 1670-1950 AD; others to 414-262 BCE. A claimed witness from Belo sur Mer described a hippopotamus and imitated its call in 1976.[9]
Lemerle's dwarf hippopotamus Hippopotamus lemerlei Western Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 670-836 AD.[7][17]  
Madagascar dwarf hippopotamus Hippopotamus madagascariensis Central Madagascar subhumid forests Most recent remains dated to 687-880 AD.[7][17]  

Birds (class Aves)

Elephant birds (order Aepyornithiformes)

Elephant birds (family Aepyornithidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Hildebrandt's elephant bird Aepyornis hildebrandti Central and eastern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 664-773 AD.[17]
Giant elephant bird Aepyornis maximus Central and southern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1040-1380 AD.[18]  
Robust elephant-bird Mullerornis modestus Central and southern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 680-880 AD.[17]  
Titan elephant bird Vorombe titan Central and southern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 771-952 AD.[17]  

Waterfowl (order Anseriformes)

Ducks, geese, and swans (family Anatidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Malagasy shelduck Alopochen sirabensis Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 530-860 AD.[9]
 
Mauritius sheldgoose Alopochen mauritiana Mauritius Last recorded in 1693.[19]
 
Réunion sheldgoose Alopochen kervazoi Réunion Last recorded in 1671-1672.[20]  
Mascarene teal Anas theodori Mauritius and Réunion Last recorded in Mauritius around 1700 and in 1710 on Réunion.[4]
Réunion pochard Aythya cf. innotata Réunion Known from subfossil bones, it was possibly referenced in texts from 1687 and 1710 mentioning sarcelles et canards.[4]
Stout-legged duck cf. Anas bernieri Rodrigues Known from a single subfossil femur. A 1601 reference to "geese" in the island may refer to this unnamed species.[4]

Flamingos (order Phoenicopteriformes)

Flamingos (family Phoenicopteridae)

Locally extinct
Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Greater flamingo Phoenicopterus roseus Africa, Mediterranean region, and South Asia[21] Hunted to extinction in the Mascarene Islands, disappearing from Réunion by 1730 and from Mauritius by 1770. Only stragglers were present in Rodrigues. The Mauritius "géant" mentioned by François Leguat in 1708 was probably a flamingo and not an endemic bird species as sometimes considered.[4] Survives in Madagascar.[21]  

Grebes (order Podicipediformes)

Grebes (family Podicipedidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Alaotra grebe Tachybaptus rufolavatus Lake Alaotra, Madagascar Last seen in 1985. Declined due to hunting, introduction of invasive species of Tilapia, Micropterus salmoides and Channa striata; conversion of marsh areas for agriculture, soil erosion and sedimentation from deforestation. The last individuals hybridized with little grebes arrived from Africa.[22]  

Pigeons and doves (order Columbiformes)

Pigeons and doves (family Columbidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Mauritius blue pigeon Alectroenas nitidissimus Mauritius Last confirmed individual was killed in 1826, though it might have survived in remote areas until 1837. As the species persisted for two centuries after settlement, it probably wasn't driven to extinction by introduced predators, but mainly because of deforestation.[18]
 
Rodrigues blue pigeon Alectroenas payandeei Rodrigues Only known from a single, subfossil tarsometatarsus and possibly a femur. It was larger than any other Alectroenas species except the Mauritian one. Probably disappeared before Leguat arrived to the island in the 1690s.[18]
Réunion blue pigeon Alectroenas sp. Réunion Last reported in 1671-1672.[18] Considered a hypothetical species: it almost certainly existed but lacks supporting fossil remains.[4] Probably disappeared due to hunting and predation by introduced cats.[18]
Providence blue pigeon Alectroenas sp. Islands St. Pierre and Providence, Seychelles Only known from a description made in 1821-1822.[18]
Mauritian wood pigeon Columba thiriouxi Mauritius Described from subfossil remains, it is believed to have become extinct by 1730 due to hunting, predation by introduced black rats, and deforestation.[18] The species has been questioned due to the material being scarce and not completely distinguishable from rock doves[23] introduced to the island in 1639.[24] However, early historical accounts mention the existence of pigeons that were caught with ease.[18]
Mauritian turtle dove Nesoenas cicur Mauritius Similar to the Malagasy turtle dove but more terrestrial, with more robust legs and smaller wings. Disappeared by 1730 due to hunting, predation by introduced mammals, and deforestation. The Madagascar turtle dove was introduced in 1770 and mistakenly described as a native later.[18]
Réunion pink pigeon Nesoenas duboisi Réunion Larger than the Mauritian species, it was last reported in 1704. Disappeared due to predation by introduced black rats and cats.[18]
Amirante turtle dove Nesoenas picturata aldabrana Amirante Islands of Seychelles Probably extinct due to hybridization with introduced Malagasy turtle dove. Pure individuals were last reported in the 1950s.[18]
Seychelles turtle dove Nesoenas picturata rostrata Seychelles Probably extinct due to hybridization with Malagasy turtle dove.[18]
Rodrigues pigeon Nesoenas rodericanus Rodrigues A small species known from subfossil bones found in caves along with remains of Rodrigues solitaires. It disappeared between 1726 and 1761 due to predation by rats.[18]
 
Rodrigues solitaire Pezophaps solitaria Rodrigues Last reported in 1761. It was heavily hunted and also predated on by introduced cats.[25]
 
Dodo Raphus cucullatus Mauritius Possibly disappeared from the main island by the 1640s already, during the first period of Dutch settlement (1638-1658). Later reports may actually refer to the red rail, though the ones from offshore islands in 1662[18] and 1688[26] could be genuine. Though hunted, settlers were few and the primary cause of extinction may have been predation by introduced mammals like black rats, pigs, goats, and monkeys.[18]  

Cuckoos (order Cuculiformes)

Cuckoos (family Cuculidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Assumption Island coucal Centropus toulou assumptionis Assumption Island, Seychelles Last recorded in the 1920s. Some authors don't consider it different from the Madagascar subspecies. The Assumption population likely disappeared as a result of extensive guano mining. Afterwards, the island was colonized by the Aldabra subspecies C. t. insularis.[18]
Bertha's coua Coua berthae Madagascar Known from subfossil remains larger than any other coua. It was possibly also the heaviest and completely terrestrial, which would have made it vulnerable to hunting.[18]
Delalande's coua Coua delalandei Nosy Boraha Island and Point-à-Larré, Madagascar[18] Last collected in 1834. Reports from 1930 are unfounded. The species likely disappeared as a result of extensive deforestation, though hunting and predation by introduced rats could also have contributed.[27]  
Ancient coua Coua primaeva Madagascar Known from a large tarsometatarsus[18] dated to 110 BCE - 130 CE.[9] It could have been hunted.[18]

Rails and cranes (order Gruiformes)

Rails (family Rallidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Red rail Aphanapteryx bonasia Mauritius Last recorded in 1693. Presumably hunted to extinction, although introduced cats could also have taken some birds.[28]  
Réunion rail Dryolimnas augusti Réunion Last recorded in 1674. Presumably driven to extinction by hunting, and predation by rats and cats.[29]
Cheke's wood rail Dryolimnas chekei[30] Mauritius Possibly mentioned in a 1602 document. A fightless descendant of the white-throated rail, which is a rare vagrant in Mauritius. It quickly disappeared due to hunting and predation by introduced mammals.[18]
Assumption white-throated rail Dryolimnas cuvieri abbotti Assumption Island, Seychelles Last recorded in 1908. Disappeared due to habitat destruction caused by guano mining and predation by introduced rats.[18]
Rodrigues rail Erythromachus leguati Rodrigues Last recorded in 1726. It was hunted to extinction.[31]  
Mascarene coot Fulica newtonii Mauritius and Réunion Last recorded on Réunion in 1672 and on Mauritius in 1693. Presumed hunted to extinction.[32]  
Réunion swamphen Porphyrio caerulescens Réunion Last recorded around 1730 and presumably hunted to extinction.[33] Considered a hypothetical species: it almost certainly existed but lacks supporting fossil remains.[4]  
Seychelles swamphen Porphyrio sp. Seychelles Last reported in 1775. It likely was exterminated by introduced rats or cats. No remains survive.[34]

Albatrosses and petrels (order Procellariiformes)

Petrels and shearwaters (family Procellariidae)

Locally extinct
Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Mascarene petrel Pseudobulweria aterrima Mascarene Islands Survived the introduction of rats in Rodrigues but disappeared with the arrival of cats in 1726-1761. A dead bird was found in Mauritius in 2002, presumed to have dispersed from Réunion. Survives but is critically endangered in Réunion.[35][34]  
Bourne's petrel Pterodroma sp. Rodrigues Named after unpublished subfossil remains. Presumed extinct in 1726-1761.[34]

Boobies, cormorants, and relatives (order Suliformes)

Sulids (family Sulidae)

Locally extinct
Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Abbott's booby Papasula abbotti Indian and Pacific oceanic islands, from the Seychelles and Mascarenes to the Northern Marianas and Marquesas Islands[36] Last recorded in Mauritius around 1670, Rodrigues in 1832, and Seychelles in 1908.[34] Vagrants from Christmas Island (only surviving breeding population) visited Chagos until 1996.[36] It seems to have disappeared from Mauritius due to nest raiding by introduced monkeys, with old birds persisting for a time after rearing young became impossible. It likely was hunted to extinction in Rodrigues, where it was held as the only seabird worthy of human consumption in the 18th century. In Seychelles, it disappeared due to a combination of hunting and habitat destruction through deforestation and guano mining.[34] Examination of subfossil remains from the Mascarenes indicates that the local population was distinct.[4]  
Red-footed booby Sula sula Oceanic circumglobal between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn[37] Hunted to extinction in Rodrigues in 1874.[34] Extinct as resident but still vagrant in Mauritius. Survives in Réunion, Madagascar, and Seychelles.[37]
 

Cormorants and shags (family Phalacrocoracidae)

Locally extinct
Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Reed cormorant Microcarbo africanus Sub-Saharan Africa, Madagascar, Mauritius and Réunion Extinct in Mauritius and Réunion. Last recorded on Réunion in 1705, where the young were considered good to eat.[4] It survived the introduction of rats and pigs, but disappeared when cats were introduced.[34] No historical mentions from Mauritius but subfossils were found at the Mare aux Songes. The Mascarene remains are distinct and smaller, possibly representing a third subspecies after the African and Malagasy ones.[4]  

Pelicans, herons, and ibises (order Pelecaniformes)

Ibises and spoonbills (family Threskiornithidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Réunion ibis Threskiornis solitarius Réunion Last seen in 1761. Hunting was the likely cause of extinction.[38]  

Herons (family Ardeidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Réunion night heron Nycticorax duboisi Réunion Last recorded in 1674. Likely hunted to extinction.[39]
Mauritius night heron Nycticorax mauritianus Mauritius Last recorded in 1693. Likely hunted to extinction.[40]  
Rodrigues night heron Nycticorax megacephalus Rodrigues Last recorded in 1726. Likely hunted to extinction.[41]
 
Locally extinct, herons (family Ardeidae)
Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Western reef heron[b] Egretta gularis Coastal tropical and subtropical Africa, southwest Asia, and Madagascar[43] Last recorded on Mauritius in 1602 and on Réunion in 1705. Survives on Madagascar and is a common vagrant on other Indian Ocean islands.[4]  

Pelicans (family Pelecanidae)

Locally extinct
Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Pink-backed pelican Pelecanus rufescens Subsaharan Africa[44] and western Madagascar Bred in the Antsalova region of Madagascar until the 1950s-1960s. Vagrants were last seen on Lake Bedo in 2004.[45]  

Hawks and relatives (order Accipitriformes)

Hawks, eagles, kites, harriers and Old World vultures (family Accipitridae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Malagasy crowned eagle Stephanoaetus mahery Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 3630-3570 BCE.[46]
Two eagle species Aquila spp. Madagascar Known from subfossil remains. It is unknown if they represent endemic species or populations of eagle species surviving outside Madagascar.[45]
Locally extinct, hawks, eagles, kites, harriers and Old World vultures (family Accipitridae)
Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Réunion harrier Circus maillardi Mauritius and Réunion Last recorded on Mauritius in 1606. It is unclear why it survived on Réunion only.[4]  

Owls (order Strigiformes)

True owls (family Strigidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Réunion scops owl Otus grucheti Réunion Only known from subfossil remains. Presumed to have become extinct in the 18th century as a result of deforestation.[18]
Rodrigues scops owl Otus murivorus Rodrigues Last recorded in 1726. It could have disappeared due to deforestation or predation by introduced rats and cats.[18]  
Mauritius scops owl Otus sauzieri Mauritius Last claimed sighting (second-hand) in 1837. It likely disappeared as a result of increased deforestation, as it survived for two centuries after potential predatory mammals were introduced.[18]
 

Kingfishers and relatives (order Coraciiformes)

Ground rollers (family Brachypteraciidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Ampoza ground roller Brachypteracias langrandi Southwest Madagascar Only known from a single humerus fossil discovered in 1929. It could have disappeared due to aridification.[47]

Falcons (order Falconiformes)

Falcons and caracaras (family Falconidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Réunion kestrel Falco duboisi Réunion Last recorded in 1671-1672. The reasons of extinction are unknown, but presumed human-induced.[48]

Parrots (order Psittaciformes)

Old World parrots (family Psittaculidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Broad-billed parrot Lophopsittacus mauritianus Mauritius Last recorded in 1673-1675. It was likely hunted to extinction.[49] Though large and a poor flier, it was also ill-tempered and apparently capable of fighting introduced mammals.[18]  
Mascarene parrot Mascarinus mascarinus Réunion Carl Wilhelm Hahn's 1834 claim that he had seen the last individual alive in the menagerie of Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria is usually cited as the last known instance of this species. However, the observation itself was not dated and could have happened decades before. In fact, Maximilian I died in 1825, and when his animals were auctioned the following year, no mascarene parrot was listed among them. Hahn's illustration of the bird also appears to have been copied from a 50 years older painting. The species was otherwise last mentioned in the wild in the 1770s, and in captivity in Europe in 1784.[50]  
Réunion parrot Necropsittacus? borbonicus Réunion Only known from Sieur Dubois's 1671-1672 description.[18] Considered a hypothetical species: it almost certainly existed but lacks supporting fossil remains.[4] Lionel Walter Rothschild's assignation of the species to the genus Necropsittacus in 1907 is unsupported.[18]  
Rodrigues parrot Necropsittacus rodricanus Rodrigues Last recorded in 1761. It was likely hunted to extinction.[51] Other possible causes include deforestation and predation by introduced rats and cats.[18]
 
Seychelles parakeet Palaeornis wardi Mahé, Silhouette and Praslin, Seychelles Last known individual was killed in 1893. Disappeared due to habitat clearing for coconut plantations, shooting and trapping to protect crops.[52]
 
Mascarene grey parakeet Psittacula bensoni Mauritius and Réunion Last recorded on Réunion in 1732 and on Mauritius in 1759. It was hunted for food and to protect crops. Its final disappearance coincides with large scale clearing of forests for agriculture with slash and burn tactics. All surviving material is from Mauritius as no individuals from Réunion were collected and preserved.[18]  
Réunion parakeet Psittacula eques eques Réunion Last recorded in 1732. Only known from contemporary paintings and descriptions of mounted specimens, now lost.[50]
 
Newton's parakeet Psittacula exsul Rodrigues Last collected in 1875. By then the species was very rare and the survivors could have been wiped out by a series of cyclones that struck the island in the following years. It was very tame and easy to catch.[18]  
Locally extinct, old World parrots (family Psittaculidae)
Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Grey-headed lovebird Agapornis canus Madagascar and Seychelles Extirpated from Seychelles. An introduced population from Mauritius is also extinct. Survives in Madagascar and has been successfully introduced to Comoros and Mayotte.[53]  

Passerines (order Passeriformes)

Reed warblers (family Acrocephalidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Aldabra brush warbler Nesillas aldabrana Malabar Island, Seychelles Last recorded in 1983. Likely driven to extinction by habitat degradation caused by introduced goats and tortoises, and predation by cats and rats.[54]

Bulbuls (family Pycnonotidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Rodrigues bulbul Hypsipetes cowlesi Rodrigues Known from subfossil remains.[18]

White-eyes (family Zosteropidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Marianne white-eye Zosterops semiflavus Marianne Island, Seychelles Last recorded in 1892.[18]  

Starlings (family Sturnidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Mauritius starling Cryptopsar ischyrhynchus Mauritius Known from subfossil remains; it was never mentioned in early literature.[55]
Hoopoe starling Fregilupus varius Réunion Last known individual killed in 1837. Possible reasons for extinction include hunting, habitat degradation, and introduced avian diseases.[56]  
Rodrigues starling Necropsar rodericanus Rodrigues Last recorded in 1726. The cause of extinction is unknown, but could have included hunting, habitat destruction, and predation by introduced mammals.[57]  

Weavers (family Ploceidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Réunion fody Foudia delloni Réunion Last recorded in 1671-1672. It could have disappeared due to predation by black rats, which were introduced a few years later, or the clearing of lowland forests for agriculture.[18]  

Reptiles (class Reptilia)

Squamates (order Squamata)

Common geckos (family Gekkonidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Rodrigues day gecko Phelsuma edwardnewtonii Rodrigues Last collected in 1917. Probably driven to extinction due to predation by introduced rats or cats.[58]  
Rodrigues giant day gecko Phelsuma gigas Rodrigues and nearby Frégate Island Last collected in 1842.[50] Disappeared from the main island after the introduction of cats in 1732-1755, and from Frégate after the introduction of brown rats.[59]  

Skinks (family Scincidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Gongylomorphus borbonicus Réunion Last recorded in 1839.[50] Its extinction coincides with the introduction of the predatory oriental wolf snake in the island.[60]
Reunion giant skink Leiolopisma ceciliae Réunion Only known from subfossil remains. It was possibly driven to extinction by rats, which were introduced in 1670.[61]
Mauritian giant skink Leiolopisma mauritiana Mauritius Known from subfossil remains. The cause of extinction is unknown and may predate European arrival.[62]  

Splitjaw snakes (family Bolyeriidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Round Island burrowing boa Bolyeria multocarinata Round Island and possibly mainland Mauritius Possible subfossil vertebrae were found on mainland Mauritius but cannot be confidently assigned to this species or the extant Round Island boa (Casarea dussumieri). Similarly, snakes of the same size were reported on other offshore islands, such as Ile de la Passe on the southeast until the 1760s, Gunner’s Quoin and Flat Island on the north until 1839. If present on mainland Mauritius, it might have been driven extinct there due to predation by rats or cats. Restricted with certainty to Round Island by 1881, it was last recorded in 1975. Its final extinction was caused by the island being denuded of vegetation by introduced goats and rabbits.[63]  

Typical blind snakes (family Typhlopidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Hoffstetter's worm snake Madatyphlops cariei Mauritius Named after subfossil vertebrae found around 1900. A 1803 mention of a small snake could refer to this species.[64]

Turtles (order Testudines)

Tortoises (family Testudinidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Abrupt giant tortoise Aldabrachelys abrupta Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1230-1315.[65]  
Daudin's giant tortoise Aldabrachelys gigantea daudinii Mahé, Seychelles Extinct since c. 1850.[66]
Grandidier's giant tortoise Aldabrachelys grandidieri Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 668-884 AD.[65]
 
Astrochelys rogerbouri Madagascar Discovered after genetic testing of a subfossil bone originally identified as a juvenile Aldabrachelys, dating to 688-881 AD.[65]
Réunion giant tortoise Cylindraspis indica Réunion Extinct since c. 1840.[66]  
Saddle-backed Mauritius giant tortoise Cylindraspis inepta[67] Mauritius Extinct, at least on the main island, since c. 1735.[66] In 1844 a female tortoise was captured alive on Round Island and taken to Mauritius, where it laid eggs that hatched. The fate and species of these tortoises is unknown.[50]  
Domed Rodrigues giant tortoise Cylindraspis peltastes Rodrigues Extinct since c. 1800.[66]  
Domed Mauritius giant tortoise Cylindraspis triserrata[68] Mauritius Extinct, at least on the main island, since c. 1735.[66] In 1844 a female tortoise was captured alive on Round Island and taken to Mauritius, where it laid eggs that hatched. The fate and species of these tortoises is unknown.[50]  
Saddle-backed Rodrigues giant tortoise Cylindraspis vosmaeri Rodrigues Extinct since c. 1800.[66]  

Crocodilians (order Crocodilia)

Crocodiles (family Crocodylidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Voay robustus Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 586-670 AD.[69]  

Ray-finned fish (class Actinopterygii)

Cichlids and convict blennies (order Cichliformes)

Cichlids (family Cichlidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Ptychochromis onilahy Onilahy river, southwestern Madagascar Known from five individuals collected in 1962, described as a new species in 2006. It was driven to extinction by deforestation causing increased sedimentation, along with fishing and predation by introduced tilapias.[70]

Toothcarps (order Cyprinodontiformes)

Livebearers and relatives (family Poeciliidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Pantanodon madagascariensis Mahavelona to Fenoarivo, northeastern Madagascar Disappeared in the 1960s due to conversion of its swamp habitat in rice fields, and competition with introduced gambusias.[71]

Insects (class Insecta)

Butterflies and moths (order Lepidoptera)

Brush-footed butterflies (family Nymphalidae)

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Libythea cinyras Mauritius Last recorded in 1865.[72]  

Copepods (class Copepoda)[c]

Order Calanoida

Family Diaptomidae

Common name Scientific name Range
Tropodiaptomus ctenopus Tananarive, Madagascar[74]

Order Cyclopoida

Family Cyclopidae

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Afrocyclops pauliani Tananarive, Madagascar Last collected in 1951.[75]  

Crabs and shrimps (class Malacostraca)

Order Decapoda

Family Coenobitidae

Locally extinct
Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Coconut crab Birgus latro Tropical Indo-Pacific islands, excluding Mauritius.[76] Extinct in Madagascar, Rodrigues, and Réunion; extant in Seychelles and possibly Comoros.[76]  

Gastropods (class Gastropoda)

Order Stylommatophora

Family Cerastidae

Common name Scientific name Range Comments Pictures
Rachis comorensis Mayotte  
Rachis sanguineus Mauritius
Pachnodus velutinus Mahé, Seychelles Hybridized with Pachnodus niger after it was introduced in 1972. By 1994 there were no pure individuals left.[77]  

Family Euconulidae

Common name Scientific name Range Comments
Caldwellia philyrina Mauritius
Dupontia proletaria Mauritius and Réunion
Colparion madgei Mauritius Last recorded in 1938.[78]
Ctenoglypta newtoni Mauritius Last recorded in 1871.[79]
Pachystyla rufozonata Mauritius Last recorded in 1869.[80]

Family Helicarionidae

Scientific name Range
Erepta nevilli Mauritius
Harmogenanina linophora Mauritius and Réunion
Harmogenanina subdetecta Réunion

Family Streptaxidae

Scientific name Range Comments
Gonospira nevilli Mauritius
Gulella mayottensis Mayotte
Gibbus lyonetianus Mauritius Last seen in 1905.[81]
Gonidomus newtoni Mauritius Last seen in 1867.[82]

Order Architaenioglossa

Family Cyclophoridae

Scientific name Range Pictures
Cyclophorus horridulum Mayotte
Cyclosurus mariei Mayotte  

Order Littorinimorpha

Family Pomatiidae

Scientific name Range Pictures
Tropidophora desmazuresi Mauritius  
Tropidophora semilineata Mayotte

Bivalves (class Bivalvia)

Order Unionida

Family Unionidae

Scientific name Range
Unio cariei Réunion

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The source gives "11,700 calendar yr b2k (before AD 2000)". But "BP" means "before AD 1950". Therefore, the Holocene began 11,650 BP. Doing the math, that is c. 9700 BCE.
  2. ^ The population in this region has previously been considered a separate species, the dimorphic egret E. dimorpha.[42]
  3. ^ Although some sources treat Copepoda as a subclass, the World Register of Marine Species considers Copepoda a class within the superclass Multicrustacea.[73]

References

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list, madagascar, indian, ocean, island, animals, extinct, holocene, this, list, madagascar, indian, ocean, island, animals, extinct, holocene, that, covers, extinctions, from, holocene, epoch, geologic, epoch, that, began, about, years, before, present, about. This is a list of Madagascar and Indian Ocean Island animals extinct in the Holocene that covers extinctions from the Holocene epoch a geologic epoch that began about 11 650 years before present about 9700 BCE a and continues to the present day 1 Life restoration of a large sloth lemur Palaeopropithecus ingens Contents 1 Mammals class Mammalia 1 1 Afrosoricidans order Afrosoricida 1 1 1 Tenrecs family Tenrecidae 1 1 2 Incertae familiae 1 2 Primates order Primates 1 2 1 Aye ayes family Daubentoniidae 1 2 2 Koala lemurs family Megaladapidae 1 2 3 Lemurids family Lemuridae 1 2 4 Monkey lemurs family Archaeolemuridae 1 2 5 Sloth lemurs family Palaeopropithecidae 1 3 Rodents order Rodentia 1 3 1 Nesomyids family Nesomyidae 1 4 Bats order Chiroptera 1 4 1 Megabats family Pteropodidae 1 4 2 Family Rhinonycteridae 1 4 3 Family Hipposideridae 1 5 Carnivorans order Carnivora 1 5 1 Malagasy carnivorans family Eupleridae 1 6 Even toed ungulates order Artiodactyla 1 6 1 Hippopotamids family Hippopotamidae 2 Birds class Aves 2 1 Elephant birds order Aepyornithiformes 2 1 1 Elephant birds family Aepyornithidae 2 2 Waterfowl order Anseriformes 2 2 1 Ducks geese and swans family Anatidae 2 3 Flamingos order Phoenicopteriformes 2 3 1 Flamingos family Phoenicopteridae 2 3 1 1 Locally extinct 2 4 Grebes order Podicipediformes 2 4 1 Grebes family Podicipedidae 2 5 Pigeons and doves order Columbiformes 2 5 1 Pigeons and doves family Columbidae 2 6 Cuckoos order Cuculiformes 2 6 1 Cuckoos family Cuculidae 2 7 Rails and cranes order Gruiformes 2 7 1 Rails family Rallidae 2 8 Albatrosses and petrels order Procellariiformes 2 8 1 Petrels and shearwaters family Procellariidae 2 8 1 1 Locally extinct 2 9 Boobies cormorants and relatives order Suliformes 2 9 1 Sulids family Sulidae 2 9 1 1 Locally extinct 2 9 2 Cormorants and shags family Phalacrocoracidae 2 9 2 1 Locally extinct 2 10 Pelicans herons and ibises order Pelecaniformes 2 10 1 Ibises and spoonbills family Threskiornithidae 2 10 2 Herons family Ardeidae 2 10 2 1 Locally extinct herons family Ardeidae 2 10 3 Pelicans family Pelecanidae 2 10 3 1 Locally extinct 2 11 Hawks and relatives order Accipitriformes 2 11 1 Hawks eagles kites harriers and Old World vultures family Accipitridae 2 11 1 1 Locally extinct hawks eagles kites harriers and Old World vultures family Accipitridae 2 12 Owls order Strigiformes 2 12 1 True owls family Strigidae 2 13 Kingfishers and relatives order Coraciiformes 2 13 1 Ground rollers family Brachypteraciidae 2 14 Falcons order Falconiformes 2 14 1 Falcons and caracaras family Falconidae 2 15 Parrots order Psittaciformes 2 15 1 Old World parrots family Psittaculidae 2 15 1 1 Locally extinct old World parrots family Psittaculidae 2 16 Passerines order Passeriformes 2 16 1 Reed warblers family Acrocephalidae 2 16 2 Bulbuls family Pycnonotidae 2 16 3 White eyes family Zosteropidae 2 16 4 Starlings family Sturnidae 2 16 5 Weavers family Ploceidae 3 Reptiles class Reptilia 3 1 Squamates order Squamata 3 1 1 Common geckos family Gekkonidae 3 1 2 Skinks family Scincidae 3 1 3 Splitjaw snakes family Bolyeriidae 3 1 4 Typical blind snakes family Typhlopidae 3 2 Turtles order Testudines 3 2 1 Tortoises family Testudinidae 3 3 Crocodilians order Crocodilia 3 3 1 Crocodiles family Crocodylidae 4 Ray finned fish class Actinopterygii 4 1 Cichlids and convict blennies order Cichliformes 4 1 1 Cichlids family Cichlidae 4 2 Toothcarps order Cyprinodontiformes 4 2 1 Livebearers and relatives family Poeciliidae 5 Insects class Insecta 5 1 Butterflies and moths order Lepidoptera 5 1 1 Brush footed butterflies family Nymphalidae 6 Copepods class Copepoda c 6 1 Order Calanoida 6 1 1 Family Diaptomidae 6 2 Order Cyclopoida 6 2 1 Family Cyclopidae 7 Crabs and shrimps class Malacostraca 7 1 Order Decapoda 7 1 1 Family Coenobitidae 7 1 1 1 Locally extinct 8 Gastropods class Gastropoda 8 1 Order Stylommatophora 8 1 1 Family Cerastidae 8 1 2 Family Euconulidae 8 1 3 Family Helicarionidae 8 1 4 Family Streptaxidae 8 1 5 Order Architaenioglossa 8 1 6 Family Cyclophoridae 8 2 Order Littorinimorpha 8 2 1 Family Pomatiidae 9 Bivalves class Bivalvia 9 1 Order Unionida 9 1 1 Family Unionidae 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References The Republic of Madagascar is a large island country in the Indian Ocean off the coast of East Africa Other Indian Ocean islands near Madagascar include the Mascarene Islands split between the Republic of Mauritius and the French department of Reunion the Republic of Seychelles and the Comoro Islands split between the Union of Comoros and the French department of Mayotte Madagascar and the Indian Ocean islands are a biodiversity hotspot The wildlife of Madagascar evolved in isolation and is distinct from the wildlife of Africa and other continents Approximately 90 percent of all plant and animal species found in Madagascar are endemic 2 Lemurs are endemic to the island of Madagascar Numerous animal species have disappeared from Madagascar and the Indian Ocean islands as part of the ongoing Holocene extinction driven by human activity The famous dodo Raphus cucullatus last seen in 1662 was endemic to Mauritius 3 All 17 extinct lemurs were giant lemurs larger than the extant lemurs The subfossil remains of certain avian orders are scarce on Reunion Consequently a few of the extinct birds from Reunion are hypothetical species They almost certainly existed but lack supporting subfossil remains 4 Locally extinct native species are included below but human introduced species that were later wiped out are not included Mammals class Mammalia EditAfrosoricidans order Afrosoricida Edit Tenrecs family Tenrecidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsMacPhee s shrew tenrec Microgale macpheei Southeastern Madagascar Only known from cave remains dated to 790 410 BCE 5 Incertae familiae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesSmaller bibymalagasy Plesiorycteropus germainepetterae MadagascarLarger bibymalagasy Plesiorycteropus madagascariensis Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 865 965 AD 6 Primates order Primates Edit Aye ayes family Daubentoniidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsGiant aye aye Daubentonia robusta Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 900 1150 AD 7 Koala lemurs family Megaladapidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesMegaladapis edwardsi Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1300 1430 AD 7 Megaladapis grandidieri Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 980 1170 AD 7 Megaladapis madagascariensis Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1206 1427 AD 8 Lemurids family Lemuridae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesGiant ruffed lemur Pachylemur insignis Southwestern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 890 990 AD 8 Giant ruffed lemur Pachylemur jullyi Central MadagascarMonkey lemurs family Archaeolemuridae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesArchaeolemur edwardsii Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1047 1280 AD 9 Archaeolemur majori Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 650 780 AD 9 Hadropithecus stenognathus Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 535 876 AD 7 Sloth lemurs family Palaeopropithecidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesMesopropithecus dolichobrachion Northern MadagascarMesopropithecus globiceps Southwestern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 245 429 AD 9 Mesopropithecus pithecoides Central Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 600 765 AD 8 Babakotia radofilai Northern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 3340 2890 BCE 9 Palaeopropithecus ingens Southwestern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1320 1630 AD 7 Palaeopropithecus kelyus Northern MadagascarPalaeopropithecus maximus Central Madagascar Archaeoindris fontoynontii Central Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 412 199 BCE 9 Rodents order Rodentia Edit Nesomyids family Nesomyidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesBrachytarsomys mahajambaensis Northern coast of MadagascarHypogeomys australis Southeastern and central Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 428 618 AD 9 There was no range overlap with its living relative the Malagasy giant rat 10 Nesomys narindaensis Northern coast of MadagascarBats order Chiroptera Edit Megabats family Pteropodidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesSmall Mauritian flying fox Pteropus subniger Mauritius and Reunion Last recorded in Mauritius in 1859 and in Reunion in 1862 Extinction might have been caused by hunting and deforestation 11 Family Rhinonycteridae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesTriaenops goodmani Northern Madagascar Described from three mandibles found in a cave 10 000 years old or younger 12 The two other extant species of the genus Triaenops in Madagascar were later moved to Paratriaenops 13 Family Hipposideridae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesHipposideros besaoka Northern Madagascar Known from numerous jawbones and isolated teeth 10 000 years old or younger 12 Carnivorans order Carnivora Edit Malagasy carnivorans family Eupleridae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesGiant fossa Cryptoprocta spelea Madagascar Most recent remains were dated to 210 AD 14 The species or a folk memory may have survived for longer Etienne de Flacourt wrote in 1658 that a leopard like carnivore more powerful than the extant fossa capable of killing calves and humans could be found in remote mountain areas 15 16 Malagasy people also distinguish two fossa species the red fossa fosa mena and the larger black fossa fosa mainty 15 Even toed ungulates order Artiodactyla Edit Hippopotamids family Hippopotamidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesMalagasy hippopotamus Hippopotamus laloumena Eastern and northern Madagascar Most recent remains of questionable provenance were dated to 1670 1950 AD others to 414 262 BCE A claimed witness from Belo sur Mer described a hippopotamus and imitated its call in 1976 9 Lemerle s dwarf hippopotamus Hippopotamus lemerlei Western Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 670 836 AD 7 17 Madagascar dwarf hippopotamus Hippopotamus madagascariensis Central Madagascar subhumid forests Most recent remains dated to 687 880 AD 7 17 Birds class Aves EditElephant birds order Aepyornithiformes Edit Elephant birds family Aepyornithidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesHildebrandt s elephant bird Aepyornis hildebrandti Central and eastern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 664 773 AD 17 Giant elephant bird Aepyornis maximus Central and southern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1040 1380 AD 18 Robust elephant bird Mullerornis modestus Central and southern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 680 880 AD 17 Titan elephant bird Vorombe titan Central and southern Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 771 952 AD 17 Waterfowl order Anseriformes Edit Ducks geese and swans family Anatidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesMalagasy shelduck Alopochen sirabensis Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 530 860 AD 9 Mauritius sheldgoose Alopochen mauritiana Mauritius Last recorded in 1693 19 Reunion sheldgoose Alopochen kervazoi Reunion Last recorded in 1671 1672 20 Mascarene teal Anas theodori Mauritius and Reunion Last recorded in Mauritius around 1700 and in 1710 on Reunion 4 Reunion pochard Aythya cf innotata Reunion Known from subfossil bones it was possibly referenced in texts from 1687 and 1710 mentioning sarcelles et canards 4 Stout legged duck cf Anas bernieri Rodrigues Known from a single subfossil femur A 1601 reference to geese in the island may refer to this unnamed species 4 Flamingos order Phoenicopteriformes Edit Flamingos family Phoenicopteridae Edit Locally extinct Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesGreater flamingo Phoenicopterus roseus Africa Mediterranean region and South Asia 21 Hunted to extinction in the Mascarene Islands disappearing from Reunion by 1730 and from Mauritius by 1770 Only stragglers were present in Rodrigues The Mauritius geant mentioned by Francois Leguat in 1708 was probably a flamingo and not an endemic bird species as sometimes considered 4 Survives in Madagascar 21 Grebes order Podicipediformes Edit Grebes family Podicipedidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesAlaotra grebe Tachybaptus rufolavatus Lake Alaotra Madagascar Last seen in 1985 Declined due to hunting introduction of invasive species of Tilapia Micropterus salmoides and Channa striata conversion of marsh areas for agriculture soil erosion and sedimentation from deforestation The last individuals hybridized with little grebes arrived from Africa 22 Pigeons and doves order Columbiformes Edit Pigeons and doves family Columbidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesMauritius blue pigeon Alectroenas nitidissimus Mauritius Last confirmed individual was killed in 1826 though it might have survived in remote areas until 1837 As the species persisted for two centuries after settlement it probably wasn t driven to extinction by introduced predators but mainly because of deforestation 18 Rodrigues blue pigeon Alectroenas payandeei Rodrigues Only known from a single subfossil tarsometatarsus and possibly a femur It was larger than any other Alectroenas species except the Mauritian one Probably disappeared before Leguat arrived to the island in the 1690s 18 Reunion blue pigeon Alectroenas sp Reunion Last reported in 1671 1672 18 Considered a hypothetical species it almost certainly existed but lacks supporting fossil remains 4 Probably disappeared due to hunting and predation by introduced cats 18 Providence blue pigeon Alectroenas sp Islands St Pierre and Providence Seychelles Only known from a description made in 1821 1822 18 Mauritian wood pigeon Columba thiriouxi Mauritius Described from subfossil remains it is believed to have become extinct by 1730 due to hunting predation by introduced black rats and deforestation 18 The species has been questioned due to the material being scarce and not completely distinguishable from rock doves 23 introduced to the island in 1639 24 However early historical accounts mention the existence of pigeons that were caught with ease 18 Mauritian turtle dove Nesoenas cicur Mauritius Similar to the Malagasy turtle dove but more terrestrial with more robust legs and smaller wings Disappeared by 1730 due to hunting predation by introduced mammals and deforestation The Madagascar turtle dove was introduced in 1770 and mistakenly described as a native later 18 Reunion pink pigeon Nesoenas duboisi Reunion Larger than the Mauritian species it was last reported in 1704 Disappeared due to predation by introduced black rats and cats 18 Amirante turtle dove Nesoenas picturata aldabrana Amirante Islands of Seychelles Probably extinct due to hybridization with introduced Malagasy turtle dove Pure individuals were last reported in the 1950s 18 Seychelles turtle dove Nesoenas picturata rostrata Seychelles Probably extinct due to hybridization with Malagasy turtle dove 18 Rodrigues pigeon Nesoenas rodericanus Rodrigues A small species known from subfossil bones found in caves along with remains of Rodrigues solitaires It disappeared between 1726 and 1761 due to predation by rats 18 Rodrigues solitaire Pezophaps solitaria Rodrigues Last reported in 1761 It was heavily hunted and also predated on by introduced cats 25 Dodo Raphus cucullatus Mauritius Possibly disappeared from the main island by the 1640s already during the first period of Dutch settlement 1638 1658 Later reports may actually refer to the red rail though the ones from offshore islands in 1662 18 and 1688 26 could be genuine Though hunted settlers were few and the primary cause of extinction may have been predation by introduced mammals like black rats pigs goats and monkeys 18 Cuckoos order Cuculiformes Edit Cuckoos family Cuculidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesAssumption Island coucal Centropus toulou assumptionis Assumption Island Seychelles Last recorded in the 1920s Some authors don t consider it different from the Madagascar subspecies The Assumption population likely disappeared as a result of extensive guano mining Afterwards the island was colonized by the Aldabra subspecies C t insularis 18 Bertha s coua Coua berthae Madagascar Known from subfossil remains larger than any other coua It was possibly also the heaviest and completely terrestrial which would have made it vulnerable to hunting 18 Delalande s coua Coua delalandei Nosy Boraha Island and Point a Larre Madagascar 18 Last collected in 1834 Reports from 1930 are unfounded The species likely disappeared as a result of extensive deforestation though hunting and predation by introduced rats could also have contributed 27 Ancient coua Coua primaeva Madagascar Known from a large tarsometatarsus 18 dated to 110 BCE 130 CE 9 It could have been hunted 18 Rails and cranes order Gruiformes Edit Rails family Rallidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesRed rail Aphanapteryx bonasia Mauritius Last recorded in 1693 Presumably hunted to extinction although introduced cats could also have taken some birds 28 Reunion rail Dryolimnas augusti Reunion Last recorded in 1674 Presumably driven to extinction by hunting and predation by rats and cats 29 Cheke s wood rail Dryolimnas chekei 30 Mauritius Possibly mentioned in a 1602 document A fightless descendant of the white throated rail which is a rare vagrant in Mauritius It quickly disappeared due to hunting and predation by introduced mammals 18 Assumption white throated rail Dryolimnas cuvieri abbotti Assumption Island Seychelles Last recorded in 1908 Disappeared due to habitat destruction caused by guano mining and predation by introduced rats 18 Rodrigues rail Erythromachus leguati Rodrigues Last recorded in 1726 It was hunted to extinction 31 Mascarene coot Fulica newtonii Mauritius and Reunion Last recorded on Reunion in 1672 and on Mauritius in 1693 Presumed hunted to extinction 32 Reunion swamphen Porphyrio caerulescens Reunion Last recorded around 1730 and presumably hunted to extinction 33 Considered a hypothetical species it almost certainly existed but lacks supporting fossil remains 4 Seychelles swamphen Porphyrio sp Seychelles Last reported in 1775 It likely was exterminated by introduced rats or cats No remains survive 34 Albatrosses and petrels order Procellariiformes Edit Petrels and shearwaters family Procellariidae Edit Locally extinct Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesMascarene petrel Pseudobulweria aterrima Mascarene Islands Survived the introduction of rats in Rodrigues but disappeared with the arrival of cats in 1726 1761 A dead bird was found in Mauritius in 2002 presumed to have dispersed from Reunion Survives but is critically endangered in Reunion 35 34 Bourne s petrel Pterodroma sp Rodrigues Named after unpublished subfossil remains Presumed extinct in 1726 1761 34 Boobies cormorants and relatives order Suliformes Edit Sulids family Sulidae Edit Locally extinct Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesAbbott s booby Papasula abbotti Indian and Pacific oceanic islands from the Seychelles and Mascarenes to the Northern Marianas and Marquesas Islands 36 Last recorded in Mauritius around 1670 Rodrigues in 1832 and Seychelles in 1908 34 Vagrants from Christmas Island only surviving breeding population visited Chagos until 1996 36 It seems to have disappeared from Mauritius due to nest raiding by introduced monkeys with old birds persisting for a time after rearing young became impossible It likely was hunted to extinction in Rodrigues where it was held as the only seabird worthy of human consumption in the 18th century In Seychelles it disappeared due to a combination of hunting and habitat destruction through deforestation and guano mining 34 Examination of subfossil remains from the Mascarenes indicates that the local population was distinct 4 Red footed booby Sula sula Oceanic circumglobal between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn 37 Hunted to extinction in Rodrigues in 1874 34 Extinct as resident but still vagrant in Mauritius Survives in Reunion Madagascar and Seychelles 37 Cormorants and shags family Phalacrocoracidae Edit Locally extinct Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesReed cormorant Microcarbo africanus Sub Saharan Africa Madagascar Mauritius and Reunion Extinct in Mauritius and Reunion Last recorded on Reunion in 1705 where the young were considered good to eat 4 It survived the introduction of rats and pigs but disappeared when cats were introduced 34 No historical mentions from Mauritius but subfossils were found at the Mare aux Songes The Mascarene remains are distinct and smaller possibly representing a third subspecies after the African and Malagasy ones 4 Pelicans herons and ibises order Pelecaniformes Edit Ibises and spoonbills family Threskiornithidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesReunion ibis Threskiornis solitarius Reunion Last seen in 1761 Hunting was the likely cause of extinction 38 Herons family Ardeidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesReunion night heron Nycticorax duboisi Reunion Last recorded in 1674 Likely hunted to extinction 39 Mauritius night heron Nycticorax mauritianus Mauritius Last recorded in 1693 Likely hunted to extinction 40 Rodrigues night heron Nycticorax megacephalus Rodrigues Last recorded in 1726 Likely hunted to extinction 41 Locally extinct herons family Ardeidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesWestern reef heron b Egretta gularis Coastal tropical and subtropical Africa southwest Asia and Madagascar 43 Last recorded on Mauritius in 1602 and on Reunion in 1705 Survives on Madagascar and is a common vagrant on other Indian Ocean islands 4 Pelicans family Pelecanidae Edit Locally extinct Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesPink backed pelican Pelecanus rufescens Subsaharan Africa 44 and western Madagascar Bred in the Antsalova region of Madagascar until the 1950s 1960s Vagrants were last seen on Lake Bedo in 2004 45 Hawks and relatives order Accipitriformes Edit Hawks eagles kites harriers and Old World vultures family Accipitridae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsMalagasy crowned eagle Stephanoaetus mahery Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 3630 3570 BCE 46 Two eagle species Aquila spp Madagascar Known from subfossil remains It is unknown if they represent endemic species or populations of eagle species surviving outside Madagascar 45 Locally extinct hawks eagles kites harriers and Old World vultures family Accipitridae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesReunion harrier Circus maillardi Mauritius and Reunion Last recorded on Mauritius in 1606 It is unclear why it survived on Reunion only 4 Owls order Strigiformes Edit True owls family Strigidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesReunion scops owl Otus grucheti Reunion Only known from subfossil remains Presumed to have become extinct in the 18th century as a result of deforestation 18 Rodrigues scops owl Otus murivorus Rodrigues Last recorded in 1726 It could have disappeared due to deforestation or predation by introduced rats and cats 18 Mauritius scops owl Otus sauzieri Mauritius Last claimed sighting second hand in 1837 It likely disappeared as a result of increased deforestation as it survived for two centuries after potential predatory mammals were introduced 18 Kingfishers and relatives order Coraciiformes Edit Ground rollers family Brachypteraciidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsAmpoza ground roller Brachypteracias langrandi Southwest Madagascar Only known from a single humerus fossil discovered in 1929 It could have disappeared due to aridification 47 Falcons order Falconiformes Edit Falcons and caracaras family Falconidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsReunion kestrel Falco duboisi Reunion Last recorded in 1671 1672 The reasons of extinction are unknown but presumed human induced 48 Parrots order Psittaciformes Edit Old World parrots family Psittaculidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesBroad billed parrot Lophopsittacus mauritianus Mauritius Last recorded in 1673 1675 It was likely hunted to extinction 49 Though large and a poor flier it was also ill tempered and apparently capable of fighting introduced mammals 18 Mascarene parrot Mascarinus mascarinus Reunion Carl Wilhelm Hahn s 1834 claim that he had seen the last individual alive in the menagerie of Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria is usually cited as the last known instance of this species However the observation itself was not dated and could have happened decades before In fact Maximilian I died in 1825 and when his animals were auctioned the following year no mascarene parrot was listed among them Hahn s illustration of the bird also appears to have been copied from a 50 years older painting The species was otherwise last mentioned in the wild in the 1770s and in captivity in Europe in 1784 50 Reunion parrot Necropsittacus borbonicus Reunion Only known from Sieur Dubois s 1671 1672 description 18 Considered a hypothetical species it almost certainly existed but lacks supporting fossil remains 4 Lionel Walter Rothschild s assignation of the species to the genus Necropsittacus in 1907 is unsupported 18 Rodrigues parrot Necropsittacus rodricanus Rodrigues Last recorded in 1761 It was likely hunted to extinction 51 Other possible causes include deforestation and predation by introduced rats and cats 18 Seychelles parakeet Palaeornis wardi Mahe Silhouette and Praslin Seychelles Last known individual was killed in 1893 Disappeared due to habitat clearing for coconut plantations shooting and trapping to protect crops 52 Mascarene grey parakeet Psittacula bensoni Mauritius and Reunion Last recorded on Reunion in 1732 and on Mauritius in 1759 It was hunted for food and to protect crops Its final disappearance coincides with large scale clearing of forests for agriculture with slash and burn tactics All surviving material is from Mauritius as no individuals from Reunion were collected and preserved 18 Reunion parakeet Psittacula eques eques Reunion Last recorded in 1732 Only known from contemporary paintings and descriptions of mounted specimens now lost 50 Newton s parakeet Psittacula exsul Rodrigues Last collected in 1875 By then the species was very rare and the survivors could have been wiped out by a series of cyclones that struck the island in the following years It was very tame and easy to catch 18 Locally extinct old World parrots family Psittaculidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesGrey headed lovebird Agapornis canus Madagascar and Seychelles Extirpated from Seychelles An introduced population from Mauritius is also extinct Survives in Madagascar and has been successfully introduced to Comoros and Mayotte 53 Passerines order Passeriformes Edit Reed warblers family Acrocephalidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsAldabra brush warbler Nesillas aldabrana Malabar Island Seychelles Last recorded in 1983 Likely driven to extinction by habitat degradation caused by introduced goats and tortoises and predation by cats and rats 54 Bulbuls family Pycnonotidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsRodrigues bulbul Hypsipetes cowlesi Rodrigues Known from subfossil remains 18 White eyes family Zosteropidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesMarianne white eye Zosterops semiflavus Marianne Island Seychelles Last recorded in 1892 18 Starlings family Sturnidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesMauritius starling Cryptopsar ischyrhynchus Mauritius Known from subfossil remains it was never mentioned in early literature 55 Hoopoe starling Fregilupus varius Reunion Last known individual killed in 1837 Possible reasons for extinction include hunting habitat degradation and introduced avian diseases 56 Rodrigues starling Necropsar rodericanus Rodrigues Last recorded in 1726 The cause of extinction is unknown but could have included hunting habitat destruction and predation by introduced mammals 57 Weavers family Ploceidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesReunion fody Foudia delloni Reunion Last recorded in 1671 1672 It could have disappeared due to predation by black rats which were introduced a few years later or the clearing of lowland forests for agriculture 18 Reptiles class Reptilia EditSquamates order Squamata Edit Common geckos family Gekkonidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesRodrigues day gecko Phelsuma edwardnewtonii Rodrigues Last collected in 1917 Probably driven to extinction due to predation by introduced rats or cats 58 Rodrigues giant day gecko Phelsuma gigas Rodrigues and nearby Fregate Island Last collected in 1842 50 Disappeared from the main island after the introduction of cats in 1732 1755 and from Fregate after the introduction of brown rats 59 Skinks family Scincidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesGongylomorphus borbonicus Reunion Last recorded in 1839 50 Its extinction coincides with the introduction of the predatory oriental wolf snake in the island 60 Reunion giant skink Leiolopisma ceciliae Reunion Only known from subfossil remains It was possibly driven to extinction by rats which were introduced in 1670 61 Mauritian giant skink Leiolopisma mauritiana Mauritius Known from subfossil remains The cause of extinction is unknown and may predate European arrival 62 Splitjaw snakes family Bolyeriidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesRound Island burrowing boa Bolyeria multocarinata Round Island and possibly mainland Mauritius Possible subfossil vertebrae were found on mainland Mauritius but cannot be confidently assigned to this species or the extant Round Island boa Casarea dussumieri Similarly snakes of the same size were reported on other offshore islands such as Ile de la Passe on the southeast until the 1760s Gunner s Quoin and Flat Island on the north until 1839 If present on mainland Mauritius it might have been driven extinct there due to predation by rats or cats Restricted with certainty to Round Island by 1881 it was last recorded in 1975 Its final extinction was caused by the island being denuded of vegetation by introduced goats and rabbits 63 Typical blind snakes family Typhlopidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsHoffstetter s worm snake Madatyphlops cariei Mauritius Named after subfossil vertebrae found around 1900 A 1803 mention of a small snake could refer to this species 64 Turtles order Testudines Edit Tortoises family Testudinidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesAbrupt giant tortoise Aldabrachelys abrupta Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 1230 1315 65 Daudin s giant tortoise Aldabrachelys gigantea daudinii Mahe Seychelles Extinct since c 1850 66 Grandidier s giant tortoise Aldabrachelys grandidieri Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 668 884 AD 65 Astrochelys rogerbouri Madagascar Discovered after genetic testing of a subfossil bone originally identified as a juvenile Aldabrachelys dating to 688 881 AD 65 Reunion giant tortoise Cylindraspis indica Reunion Extinct since c 1840 66 Saddle backed Mauritius giant tortoise Cylindraspis inepta 67 Mauritius Extinct at least on the main island since c 1735 66 In 1844 a female tortoise was captured alive on Round Island and taken to Mauritius where it laid eggs that hatched The fate and species of these tortoises is unknown 50 Domed Rodrigues giant tortoise Cylindraspis peltastes Rodrigues Extinct since c 1800 66 Domed Mauritius giant tortoise Cylindraspis triserrata 68 Mauritius Extinct at least on the main island since c 1735 66 In 1844 a female tortoise was captured alive on Round Island and taken to Mauritius where it laid eggs that hatched The fate and species of these tortoises is unknown 50 Saddle backed Rodrigues giant tortoise Cylindraspis vosmaeri Rodrigues Extinct since c 1800 66 Crocodilians order Crocodilia Edit Crocodiles family Crocodylidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesVoay robustus Madagascar Most recent remains dated to 586 670 AD 69 Ray finned fish class Actinopterygii EditCichlids and convict blennies order Cichliformes Edit Cichlids family Cichlidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsPtychochromis onilahy Onilahy river southwestern Madagascar Known from five individuals collected in 1962 described as a new species in 2006 It was driven to extinction by deforestation causing increased sedimentation along with fishing and predation by introduced tilapias 70 Toothcarps order Cyprinodontiformes Edit Livebearers and relatives family Poeciliidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsPantanodon madagascariensis Mahavelona to Fenoarivo northeastern Madagascar Disappeared in the 1960s due to conversion of its swamp habitat in rice fields and competition with introduced gambusias 71 Insects class Insecta EditButterflies and moths order Lepidoptera Edit Brush footed butterflies family Nymphalidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesLibythea cinyras Mauritius Last recorded in 1865 72 Copepods class Copepoda c EditOrder Calanoida Edit Family Diaptomidae Edit Common name Scientific name RangeTropodiaptomus ctenopus Tananarive Madagascar 74 Order Cyclopoida Edit Family Cyclopidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesAfrocyclops pauliani Tananarive Madagascar Last collected in 1951 75 Crabs and shrimps class Malacostraca EditOrder Decapoda Edit Family Coenobitidae Edit Locally extinct Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesCoconut crab Birgus latro Tropical Indo Pacific islands excluding Mauritius 76 Extinct in Madagascar Rodrigues and Reunion extant in Seychelles and possibly Comoros 76 Gastropods class Gastropoda EditOrder Stylommatophora Edit Family Cerastidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range Comments PicturesRachis comorensis Mayotte Rachis sanguineus MauritiusPachnodus velutinus Mahe Seychelles Hybridized with Pachnodus niger after it was introduced in 1972 By 1994 there were no pure individuals left 77 Family Euconulidae Edit Common name Scientific name Range CommentsCaldwellia philyrina MauritiusDupontia proletaria Mauritius and ReunionColparion madgei Mauritius Last recorded in 1938 78 Ctenoglypta newtoni Mauritius Last recorded in 1871 79 Pachystyla rufozonata Mauritius Last recorded in 1869 80 Family Helicarionidae Edit Scientific name RangeErepta nevilli MauritiusHarmogenanina linophora Mauritius and ReunionHarmogenanina subdetecta ReunionFamily Streptaxidae Edit Scientific name Range CommentsGonospira nevilli MauritiusGulella mayottensis MayotteGibbus lyonetianus Mauritius Last seen in 1905 81 Gonidomus newtoni Mauritius Last seen in 1867 82 Order Architaenioglossa Edit Family Cyclophoridae Edit Scientific name Range PicturesCyclophorus horridulum MayotteCyclosurus mariei Mayotte Order Littorinimorpha Edit Family Pomatiidae Edit Scientific name Range PicturesTropidophora desmazuresi Mauritius Tropidophora semilineata MayotteBivalves class Bivalvia EditOrder Unionida Edit Family Unionidae Edit Scientific name RangeUnio cariei ReunionSee also EditList of African animals extinct in the Holocene List of European animals extinct in the HoloceneNotes Edit The source gives 11 700 calendar yr b2k before AD 2000 But BP means before AD 1950 Therefore the Holocene began 11 650 BP Doing the math that is c 9700 BCE The population in this region has previously been considered a separate species the dimorphic egret E dimorpha 42 Although some sources treat Copepoda as a subclass the World Register of Marine Species considers Copepoda a class within the superclass Multicrustacea 73 References Edit Walker Mike Johnsen Sigfus Rasmussen Sune Olander Popp Trevor Steffensen Jorgen Peder Gibrard Phil Hoek Wim Lowe John Andrews John Bjo Rck Svante Cwynar Les C Hughen Konrad Kersahw Peter Kromer Bernd Litt Thomas Lowe David J Nakagawa Takeshi Newnham Rewi Schwander Jakob 2009 Formal definition and dating of the GSSP Global Stratotype Section and Point for the base of the Holocene using the Greenland NGRIP ice core and selected auxiliary records PDF Journal of Quaternary Science 24 1 3 17 Bibcode 2009JQS 24 3W doi 10 1002 jqs 1227 Archived PDF from the original on 2013 11 04 Retrieved 2022 04 24 Hobbes Joseph Dolan Andrew 2008 World Regional Geography Belmont CA Cengage Learning p 517 ISBN 978 0 495 38950 7 BirdLife International 2016 Raphus cucullatus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22690059A93259513 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS 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T5166A11118882 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 1996 RLTS T5166A11118882 en Retrieved 17 November 2021 Griffiths O 1996 Ctenoglypta newtoni IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 1996 e T5794A11706340 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 1996 RLTS T5794A11706340 en Retrieved 15 November 2021 Griffiths O 1996 Pachystyla rufozonata IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 1996 e T15864A5244836 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 1996 RLTS T15864A5244836 en Retrieved 14 November 2021 Griffiths O 1996 Gibbus lyonetianus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 1996 e T9179A12967161 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 1996 RLTS T9179A12967161 en Retrieved 17 November 2021 Griffiths O 1996 Gonidomus newtoni IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 1996 e T9329A12982220 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 1996 RLTS T9329A12982220 en Retrieved 17 November 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Madagascar and Indian Ocean Island animals extinct in the Holocene amp oldid 1145765918, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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