Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1044293 Quaternary International 2008 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Living and fossil owls (Aves, Strigiformes) constitute an important group for understanding the evolutionary dynamics of birds in island environments. After their different trends in island evolution, the Strigiformes can be seen as a representative of insular adaptations of birds as a whole. In fact they respond quickly to isolation with deep changes in body size, including dwarfism and gigantism, and allometric variations, such as reduction of wings, lengthening of hindlimbs and strengthening of digits and claws. The only exception is the loss of the ability to fly, which has never been recorded in Strigiformes. In this paper I report on all the endemic owls found in Mediterranean Islands, both living and fossil, in order to emphasize trends in insular evolution and the relationships between the different species sharing a certain island. The description of Aegolius martae n. sp. completes the guild of endemic Strigiformes of the early Middle Pleistocene of Sicily and allows to use Sicily as the best example of a biogeographical island type with intermediate characteristics between the oceanic and the continental ones, with the presence of some non-flying mammals, but the lack of terrestrial carnivores.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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