![]() ![]() The skull of the dodo differed much from those of other pigeons, especially in being more robust, the bill having a hooked tip, and in having a short cranium compared to the jaws. It has also been suggested that the weight depended on the season, and that individuals were fat during cool seasons, but less so during hot. A 2016 study estimated the weight at 10.6 to 14.3 kg (23 to 32 lb), based on CT scans of composite skeletons. This has also been questioned, and there is still controversy over weight estimates. A 2011 estimate by Angst and colleagues gave an average weight as low as 10.2 kg (22 lb). Kitchener attributed a high contemporary weight estimate and the roundness of dodos depicted in Europe to these birds having been overfed in captivity weights in the wild were estimated to have been in the range of 10.6–17.5 kg (23–39 lb), and fattened birds could have weighed 21.7–27.8 kg (48–61 lb). Livezey proposed that males would have weighed 21 kilograms (46 lb) and females 17 kilograms (37 lb). Weight estimates have varied from study to study. The bird was sexually dimorphic males were larger and had proportionally longer beaks. Subfossil remains and remnants of the birds that were brought to Europe in the 17th century show that dodos were very large birds, up to 1 m (3 ft 3 in) tall. A study of the few remaining feathers on the Oxford specimen head showed that they were pennaceous rather than plumaceous (downy) and most similar to those of other pigeons. ![]() The head was grey and naked, the beak green, black and yellow, and the legs were stout and yellowish, with black claws. According to most representations, the dodo had greyish or brownish plumage, with lighter primary feathers and a tuft of curly light feathers high on its rear end. Illustrations and written accounts of encounters with the dodo between its discovery and its extinction (1598–1662) are the primary evidence for its external appearance. 1625 perhaps the most accurate depiction of a live dodoĪs no complete dodo specimens exist, its external appearance, such as plumage and colouration, is hard to determine. “An up-to-date and comprehensive review of everything we know about the dodo and solitaire.Dodo among Indian birds, by Ustad Mansur, c. This extraordinary book pieces together the story of these two lost species from the fragments that have been left behind. ![]() So quickly did the bird disappear that there is insufficient evidence to form an entirely accurate picture of its appearance and ecology, and the absence has led to much speculation. The first recorded descriptions of the dodo were provided by Dutch sailors who encountered them in 1598-and within a century, the dodo was extinct. It contains all the known contemporary accounts and illustrations of the dodo and solitaire, covering their history after extinction and discussing their ecology, classification, phylogenetic placement, and evolution.īoth birds were large and flightless and lived on inhabited islands some five hundred miles east of Madagascar. The Dodo and the Solitaire is the most comprehensive book to date about these two famously extinct birds. ![]() This account of two extinct bird species offers “an amazing amount of history, references, facts, maps, and illustrations” ( Library Journal). ![]()
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