Strigopidae: taxon details and analytics

Domain
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Aves
Order
Psittaciformes
Family
Strigopidae
Genus
Species
Scientific Name
Strigopidae

Summary description from Wikipedia:

New Zealand parrot

The New Zealand parrot family, Strigopidae, consists of at least three genera of parrots – Nestor, Strigops, the fossil Nelepsittacus, and probably the fossil Heracles. The genus Nestor consists of the kea, kākā, Norfolk kākā and Chatham kākā, while the genus Strigops contains the iconic kākāpō. All extant species are endemic to New Zealand. The species of the genus Nelepsittacus were endemics of the main islands, while the two extinct species of the genus Nestor were found at the nearby oceanic islands such as Chatham Island of New Zealand, and Norfolk Island and adjacent Phillip Island.

The Norfolk kākā and the Chatham kākā have become extinct in recent times, while the species of the genus Nelepsittacus have been extinct for 16 million years. All extant species, the kākāpō, kea, and the two subspecies of the kākā, are threatened. Human activity caused the two extinctions and the decline of the other three species. Settlers introduced invasive species, such as pigs, cats, foxes, weasels, rats and possums, which eat the eggs of ground-nesting birds, and additional declines have been caused by hunting for food, killing as agricultural pests, habitat loss, and introduced wasps.

The family diverged from the other parrots around 82 million years ago when New Zealand broke off from Gondwana, while the ancestors of the genera Nestor and Strigops diverged from each other between 60 and 80 million years ago.

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Strigopidae in languages:

Arabic
ببغاء نيوزيلاند
Bokmål
Kakapofamilien
Bokmål
New Zealand-papegøyer
Czech
kakapovití
Dutch
Nieuw-Zeelandse Papegaaien
English
New Zealand Parrots
Finnish
uudenseelanninpapukaijat
French
Nestors et Strigops
German
Neuseelandpapageien
Japanese
フクロウオウム科
Portuguese
Papagaios da Nova Zelândia
Thai
วงศ์ นกแก้วนิวซีแลนด์

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Child Taxa

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