Titanis walleri: Bones of Contention

Authors

  • Gina C. Gould Syncreta Associates, Inc.
  • Irvy R. Quitmyer Florida Museum of Natural History

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.58782/flmnh.xumx1681

Keywords:

Phorusrhacidae, Great American Biotic Interchange, Florida, Pliocene, Titanis

Abstract

Titanis walleri, one of the largest and possibly the last surviving member of the otherwise South American Phorusrhacidae is reconsidered in light of all available data. The only verified phorusrhacid recovered in North America, Titanis was believed to exhibit a forward-extending arm with a flexible claw instead of a traditional bird wing like the other members of this extinct group. Our review of the already described and undescribed Titanis material housed at the Florida Museum of Natural History suggest that Titanis: (1) was like other phorusrhacids in sporting small, ineffectual ratite-like wings; (2) was among the tallest of the known phorusrhacids; and (3) is the last known member of its lineage. Hypotheses of its range extending into the Pleistocene of Texas are challenged, and herein Titanis is presumed to have suffered the same fate of many other Pliocene migrants of the Great American Interchange: extinction prior to the Pleistocene.

Journal cover with Florida Museum Logo and the text Florida Museum of Natural History Bulletin University of Florida Gainesville

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Published

2005-12-31

How to Cite

Gould, G., & Quitmyer, I. (2005). Titanis walleri: Bones of Contention. Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History, 45(4), 201–230. https://doi.org/10.58782/flmnh.xumx1681