Everything about The Hawaiian Rail totally explained
The
Hawaiian Rail (
Porzana sandwichensis),
Hawaiian Spotted Rail, or
Hawaiian Crake was a somewhat enigmatic
species of diminutive
rail that lived on
Big Island,
Hawaiʻi, but is now
extinct. It was a flightless bird that was apparently found in shrubland and secondary growth on abandoned fields and in times of danger had the habit of hiding in
Polynesian Rat burrows. Specimens are known or assumed to be from an area which roughly corresponds to the middle elevations of today's
Puna district around the present settlement of
Mountain View, below the primary rain forest. A dark form and a lighter, spotted one are known (see below).
The first collections were of individuals of the lighter form, of which today 5 specimens seem to exist: in the
Naturalis in
Leiden (one: RMNH 87450), in the
American Museum of Natural History,
New York City (1), in the zoological collection of the
Georg August University of Göttingen (2) and in the
Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum,
Hanover (1). Of the dark form, several additional individuals are present in collections in
Cambridge (
Museum of Natural History, 1),
London (
Natural History Museum, 1),
Vienna,
New York City (1) and
Honolulu (
Bishop Museum, 2). One
1778 painting by
William Ellis (plate 70) depicts a light bird, possibly the Leiden specimen (which was apparently collected in late January/early February,
1779), and in more recent times,
subfossil bones have also been recovered.
The
native name for the bird was apparently
moho, said to refer to a small "bird that crows in the grass". The name
iao or
ʻiao was claimed to refer to a
moho-like but smaller bird; it isn't clear whether this bird was the distinctive lighter form or the extinct unnamed small rail (see below). The bird is referenced in the old Hawaiian proverb
ʻAʻohe mea nāna e hoʻopuhili, he moho no ka lā makani which means roughly "nothing can blow him off course, he's like a
moho in the wind"; it was used to indicate admiration for an undaunted or determined person (as the bird was unable to fly, it wasn't affected by the wind). This isn't to be confused with the
taxonomical name
Moho, which are the ʻoʻo; also from Hawaiʻi, also extinct, but completely unrelated birds.
Systematics
Considerable confusion has been created by the existence of two distinct forms. While it can't be completely excluded that early specimens were collected on another island, only
Oʻahu and
Kauaʻi seem possible given the history of the specimens' collection, and only on the latter island is a similar-sized species now known to have once existed. However, the bones from Kauaʻi are in the upper size range of those found of
sandwichensis, while the specimens of the lighter form are all of smaller birds.
On the Big Island, a smaller species of
Porzana is now known from
subfossil bones found on the southwestern slope of
Mauna Kea, but this bird was only the size of a
Laysan Crake; it may have been the bird named
iao or
ʻiao, which would place its extinction at a relatively recent date. In addition, there are some bones of a third species, approximately 15% larger than
P. sandwichensis, found near
Kailua-Kona.
The generally accepted theory is that the lighter birds represent immatures, and certainly only such specimens have been described as young birds (the Hanover specimen is labeled as "
juvenile"), but since the exact collection localities are not known with sufficient detail, only
DNA analysis could resolve this question, particularly since the recovered bone material can also be expected to yield analyzable DNA fragments.
At any rate, both light and dark birds are today treated as a single species, the
junior synonyms of which are as follows:
- Rallus sandwichensis Gmelin, 1789
- Rallus obscurus Gmelin, 1789
- Pennula millei (lapsus) Dole, 1878
- Pennula millsi
- Pennula wilsoni Finsch, 1898
- Pennula ecaudata King
The last 5 names refer to the dark form. However, Rallus obscurus is something of a mystery as it's generally assumed that at the time of Gmelin's writing, the species was only known from light birds (which were described as sandwichensis on the preceding page of Gmelin's work), but he seems to have seen a specimen of his obscurus at the Leverian Museum (Stresemann, 1950).
Extinction
Specimens of the light form were collected in
1778 on the third
Cook expedition; the dark form was supposedly not found at that time (but see above). Apparently, all or at least most specimens of the latter were procured over a short period around
1860 by
James D. Mills, the last one in
1864. The last reliable sight record was in
1884, with a doubtful one in
1893; a dedicated search in
1887 failed to find the bird, but as it was rather cryptic, this can't be taken as unequivocal proof that it was completely extinct by then.
As neither the
Small Asian Mongoose nor
mosquitos (which transmit
fowlpox and
avian malaria, both exceptionally lethal to Hawaiian endemic birds) were present on Big Island until
1883 and the 1890s, respectively, this species' extinction was probably caused by introduced European
rats,
cats and possibly
dogs. Hunting, sometimes assumed to have played a major part, probably wasn't significant as the bird was protected by a
kapu which prohibited hunting except by
aliʻi until
1819. After that, the few specimens that were collected suggest it wasn't extensively hunted even after the
kapu were abolished.
Further Information
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