Written by: Camelia.Trahan@unt.edu
DENTON (UNT), Texas -- Ricardo Rozzi, director of the University of North Texas Sub-Antarctic
Biocultural Conservation Program in Chile, has made a substantial aviary discovery
along with international collaborators.
The interdisciplinary research team has identified a new terrestrial bird species,
Subantarctic Rayadito (Aphrastura subantarctica), in the Diego Ramírez Archipelago
-- the southernmost location in Chile and the Americas.
Previously, scientists only have identified two bird species in the genus Aphrastura
(rayadito), one native to the Juan Fernandez archipelago in the Pacific Ocean of Chile
and the other native to the forests of Patagonia, the geographical region in the southernmost
tip of South America that is governed by both Argentina and Chile.
Subantarctic Rayadito differs from other Aphrastura species in its genetics; morphology
(larger beaks, longer tarsi, shorter tails and larger body mass); and behavioral preferences
to move at shorter distances from ground level and nest in ground cavities, mainly
at the basis of albatrosses' nests, in a non-forested habitat.
"This is a significant finding for the bird species itself and for the conservation
of its habitat, which is protected by the Diego Ramirez Islands - Drake Passage Marine
Park, the largest marine protected area in southern South America that UNT helped
create with the Chilean government in 2018," Rozzi said.
Researchers first came across the new bird species years ago while studying the grey-headed
albatross, a large seabird known to inhabit the Diego Ramírez Archipelago. Rozzi noticed
what they would later identify as the Subantarctic Rayadito was usually spotted close
by the albatross.
For the last six years Rozzi and his research collaborators have conducted field testing
and data analysis to confirm the bird exhibited enough differences to be considered
an entirely new species.
"I always was curious about this little bird and finally we were able to take the
time to study it, analyzing its habitat, life habits and cohabitants from multidisciplinary
lenses," Rozzi said. "This discovery is a great expression of what international collaboration
can bring."
Among the researchers was UNT alumnus Ramiro Crego, who earned his Ph.D. in biology
in 2017 and spent time studying invasive species in Chile with UNT's Sub-Antarctic
Biocultural Conservation Program. For the Subantarctic Rayadito, Crego helped in examining
the morphology of the bird.
"This work shows us that there's still so much more to uncover in this world, so many
natural mysteries that we still do not know," said Crego, who is currently a postdoctoral
researcher at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute's Conservation Ecology
Center. "Living and researching in Chile was such a life-changing experience. The
entire program is unique in so many ways. One of the most important lessons I learned
during my time there was the value of interdisciplinary research. Bringing all those
people together on a program, on different projects, opens your eyes, your brain and
your heart to all the perspectives that help inform scientific discoveries like this
one."
Rozzi and his team of international collaborators wrote an article about the new bird
species that was published in Scientific Reports.
About the Sub-Antarctic Biocultural Conservation Program
The Sub-Antarctic Biocultural Conservation Program (SBCP) is coordinated by the University
of North Texas in the United States, and the University of Magallanes and the consortium
of the Omora Foundation in Chile, which includes the Cape Horn International Center
(CHIC) and the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile. The SBCP aims to approach
conservation by coupling the social and ecological dynamics within policy making in
Chile's UNESCO Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, at the southern tip of South America.
About Ricardo Rozzi
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