New Zealand discovery of fossilised 'monster bird' bones reveals a colossal, ancient penguin
An artist’s reconstruction of Kumimanu biceae, a giant ancient penguin, from fossils found in New Zealand.
Reconstruction by G Mayr/Senckenberg Research Institute, CC BY-ND
The emperor penguin is an impressive bird – but it would have been relatively small in comparison with some of the giant penguins that
lived in the distant past.
In a paper published today we reveal an ancient giant penguin which might have been the largest to ever live.
We have named the new species Kumimanu biceae. Kumimanu means “monster bird” in Māori, and biceae honours my mother, Bice Tennyson, who fostered my interest in natural history.
Jumbled bones reveal ancient giant
Our team of researchers from New Zealand and Germany discovered the fossil in a boulder in Otago, in southern New
Zealand. Painstaking extraction work slowly revealed that the rock contained a multitude of jumbled bones of a colossal
penguin.
These fossilised remains of the extinct penguin help us understand the early evolution of penguins.
The partly prepared skeleton of the giant penguin Kumimanu biceae. The rectangles emphasize the humerus and a bone from the shoulder girdle, which are shown separated from the original
bone cluster.
G Mayr/Senckenberg Research Institute, CC BY-ND
Flipper, body and leg bones were preserved and all are truly huge. Based on these bones, we estimate that the bird in
life would have stood 1.65m tall and weighed 100kg. In comparison, the emperor penguin is 1.1m tall and weighs 23kg. The
ancient penguin would have been around the same height as an average human male, and significantly heavier.
Artistic reconstruction of Kumimanu biceae, in comparison with a human.
Reconstruction by G Mayr/Senckenberg Research Institute, CC BY-ND
Two isolated fragments of fossil penguin bones from Antarctica reported previously may be from a larger penguin, which has been estimated to be up to two metres long. But this New
Zealand specimen has many bone elements, which show that its proportions were consistently large throughout its body.
Insights into penguin evolution
The other startling thing about the new colossal fossil is its ancient age. At 55 to 60 million years old, it is nearly
as old as the earliest penguin ancestors ever found. It would have lived during a geological period known as the
Paleocene, just after the mass extinction 66 million years ago that wiped out non-bird dinosaurs.
Slightly older penguin fossils, found in Canterbury, New Zealand – in rocks that were 58 to 62 million years old – were
from birds ranging in size from today’s yellow-eyed penguin, to the emperor penguin.
The humerus (top) and a bone from the shoulder girdle of the giant penguin Kumimanu biceae, compared to the corresponding bones of one of the largest fossil penguins known to date (Pachydyptes ponderosus from
the Eocene in New Zealand) and those of an emperor penguin (Aptendodytes forsteri).
G Mayr/Senckenberg Research Institute, CC BY-ND
Our new fossil shows that extreme gigantism in penguins, in which the size of ancient species exceeded that of the
largest living penguins, evolved at the dawn of penguin evolutionary history. Giant specimens, larger than emperor
penguins, are well documented from about 50 to 20 million years ago, but well preserved older examples in more ancestral
lineages have been lacking.
Based on the evolutionary relationships of the new species, we conclude that Kumimanu biceae represents an independent origin of giant size, which took place soon after the origin of penguins and the evolutionary
transition from flight to diving.
Kumimanu biceae would have stood well above a modern-day emperor penguin.
Tess Cole, CC BY-ND
The new colossal bird shows that huge penguins were not unusual throughout most of penguin history. However, all these
large kinds died out about 20 million years ago. We speculate that this may be because of the evolution of seals and
toothed whales which ate them – or outcompeted them for food.
Alan Tennyson, Curator of Vertebrates, Te Papa Tongarewa
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.