| Ratite
|
|
Greater rhea Rhea americana
|
| Scientific classification
|
| Kingdom Information
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| Domain
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Eukaryota
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| Kingdom
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Animalia
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| Subkingdom
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Bilateria
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| Branch
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Deuterostomia
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| Phylum Information
|
| Phylum
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Chordata
|
| Sub-phylum
|
Vertebrata
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| Infraphylum
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Gnathostomata
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| Class Information
|
| Superclass
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Tetrapoda
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| Class
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Aves
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| Sub-class
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Neornithes
|
| Infra-class
|
Neoaves
|
| Order Information
|
| Superorder
|
Paleognathae
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| Population statistics
|
Ratite (Latin: ratis, "raft") refers to living and extinct birds within the superorder Paleognathae, in which the name alludes to the raft-like, keel-less sternum. Of the species, the tinamous posses the power of flight, albeit in a reduced fashion, while the more familiar kiwis, ostriches, and similar birds are completely flightless.
Orders[edit]
Living ratites[edit]
- One family, Apterygidae, found in New Zealand, represented by three species of kiwi.
- Two families: Casuariidae, three species of cassowary, found in Australia and New Guinea; and Dromaiidae, one species of emu in Australia.
- One family, Rheidae, found in South America, and represented by two species of rhea.
- One family, Struthionidae, found in Africa, and represented by the ostrich.
- One family, Tinamidae, consisting of 47 species of tinamous found in Central and South America.
Extinct ratites[edit]
- One family, Aepyornithidae, represented by nine species of elephant bird, formerly endemic to Madagascar.
- Two families, Dinornithidae and Anomalopterygidae, comprising 19 species of New Zealand moa.
- Family of small, slender-billed birds (Lithornithidae), bearing a resemblance to living tinamous, yet known only from the fossil record.