Wet Tropics Birds

(Photo: WTMA)
|
While the Wet Tropics region is home to a
quarter of Australia's frogs or a little over a third of the country's
freshwater fish, it is home to nearly half of Australia's birds
which means that the region harbours more than 370 bird species.
Like the plants, the Class Aves (the birds)
has evolved into a wide variety of forms, some much older in the
planet's evolutionary time scale than others. Because of the variety
of habitat types, altitudes and food resources available in the
Wet Tropics (it's not all rainforest), we can enjoy seeing the
greatest number of birds in Australia. Some of the best places
for birdwatching are ecotones - areas where two habitat types
meet.
When trying to reconcile the distribution
of modern birds and the former existence and breakup of the southern
supercontinent Gondwana, some controversies cannot be avoided.
There is still a healthy scientific debate raging as to WHERE
birds originated, WHAT they evolved from and WHY they evolved
at all.
Presently, the first bird is still credited
as being Archaeopteryx and it is the first fossil unearthed with
clearly defined feathers. Archaeopteryx is 145 million years old
which means it is from the Jurassic Period - the time of the greatest
dinosaur diversity. However, some other fossils have been found
in China, Patagonia and Madagascar which also have features which
make them bird-like dinosaurs or dinosaur-like birds. These fossils
have been dated from 130, 88 and 80 million years ago, respectively.
To cut a long story short, the prevailing view supports the concept
that birds evolved from dinosaurs. Since Archeopteryx is the oldest
of these and was found in what is now southern Germany (the next
oldest is from China), it supports the idea that birds evolved
in the northern hemisphere first and spread to Gondwana.
The oldest known bird fossils found in Australia
have come from the Koonwarra fish beds near Melbourne and are
dated from 110-115 million years ago. Unfortunately, it might
be difficult to construct a neat and tidy sequence of modern bird
evolution in Australia. At the time in earth's history when birds
were becoming more diverse (the Tertiary period), the physical
conditions which create good fossils were biased in favour of
aquatic birds. We do know, however, that the oldest birds were
the flightless species which makes our emu and cassowary Australia's
oldest surviving bird species.
Information
cortesy of the Wet Tropics Management Authority.
www.cairnsliving.com
Cairns Living your guide to hotels, accommodation, rentals, apartments,
tours, real estate, news, jobs, weather, maps and life in Cairns,
Queensland, Australia.
Terms and Conditions | Advertise
| Site Map | Contact
Us
|