A REAPPRAISAL OF THE LATE QUATERNARY FOSSIL VERTEBRATES OF PYRAMID VALLEY SWAMP, NORTH CANTERBURY, NEW-ZEALAND

Citation
Rn. Holdaway et Th. Worthy, A REAPPRAISAL OF THE LATE QUATERNARY FOSSIL VERTEBRATES OF PYRAMID VALLEY SWAMP, NORTH CANTERBURY, NEW-ZEALAND, New Zealand journal of zoology, 24(1), 1997, pp. 69-121
Citations number
113
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
ISSN journal
03014223
Volume
24
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
69 - 121
Database
ISI
SICI code
0301-4223(1997)24:1<69:AROTLQ>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
The late Quaternary fossil vertebrate fauna from deposits at Pyramid V alley, North Canterbury, New Zealand is reassessed. The faunal composi tion as contained in previous lists is updated, and minimum numbers of individuals represented are given. Measures of faunal diversity are p resented and compared with values for present New Zealand systems and other fossil sites. The revised faunal list includes a tuatara, one ge cko, at least 46 species of bird, and one species of bat. The avifauna was dominated by moas and waterfowl. The fossil record was biased tow ards large taxa because of the taphonomic properties of the site. Depo sition was slow: individuals were added a few per year and not as a re sult of catastrophes. Bird diversity, by various measures, was high fo r a New Zealand site. Diversity indices and rarefraction curves sugges t that a site, or group of comparable smaller sites, must contain more than 300 individuals before adequate estimates of the species richnes s of the sampled fauna are possible. Ten diurnal vertebrate guilds are recognised, several of which are now extinct; all guilds have lost at least 50% of their former constituent species. Sample sizes of two mo a taxa were sufficient to allow preliminary analysis of age and sex ra tios: in Dinornis giganteus the sex ratio was skewed strongly in favou r of the putative female individuals; in Emeus crassus the ratio was n early equal. Consequences of the differences are discussed. Evidence i s presented that Gallirallus minor, reported from fossil deposits, was based on individuals of Gallirallus australis at the lower end of the size range. Evidence of predation of adult moas by Haast's eagle is r ecorded, and the predator-prey ratio for a system based on birds is gi ven. The chronology, environment, and components of the fauna are disc ussed.