Ratite

From Conservapedia
Ratite
Rhea americana 1.jpg
Greater rhea
Rhea americana
Scientific classification
Kingdom Information
Domain Eukaryota
Kingdom Animalia
Subkingdom Bilateria
Branch Deuterostomia
Phylum Information
Phylum Chordata
Sub-phylum Vertebrata
Infraphylum Gnathostomata
Class Information
Superclass Tetrapoda
Class Aves
Sub-class Neornithes
Infra-class Neoaves
Order Information
Superorder Paleognathae
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.

Categories: [Birds]


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