Like human babies riding in cars, millions of years ago certain species of mammals found themselves simply unable to stay awake while in the jaws of the terror birds. So sleepy! |
These are the terror birds: scrappy, powerful critters that drove their enormous hooked beaks through small mammals as easily as that guy who put a pickax through my crazy uncle’s skull in a bar fight that one time (he survived, and no, I’m not even kidding). The 18 known species, the tallest growing to a staggering 10 feet tall, didn’t bother with flying, instead opting to chase down all those creatures that had only just thrown their good-riddance-to-the-massive-carnivorous-dinosaurs party. The poor things woke up with a hangover, and the hangover was the terror bird.
It was 60 million years ago in South America, which had not yet joined with its northern counterpart, where the terror birds rose to power in isolation as apex predators. Even given their success, their fossils are fragmentary and extremely rare, according to paleontologist Luis Chiappe, who in 2007 described the titanic, strangely boxy noggin of the biggest terror bird ever: Kelenken, named after the fearsome bird spirit of Patagonia’s native Tehuelche people.
To the best of paleontologists’ knowledge, terror birds weren’t see-through. But then again, no one has definitively disproved that they were see-through. |
From fossils like these, paleontologists reckon that terror birds were no crumb-loving pigeons, and not just because there was no bread back then. While a skull can’t tell us exactly how it killed, for Chiappe, this is clearly the beak of a carnivore.
“I mean, we know that a little parrot, a cockatoo, can take your finger out,” he said. “Imagine what a bird like this could have done, the damage it could have done with just a strike of this massive skull and beak. So that’s obviously one very easy way of imagining this is how these animals killed their prey.”
The terror birds called forests their home, likely lying in wait to ambush the many small mammals that proliferated in South America after the fall of the dinosaurs. But their skulls and beaks probably weren’t strong enough to tackle large prey, biomechanical studies have shown. With their massively developed legs, they would have been more than capable of chasing down scampering critters: These were extremely nimble, swift predators, hitting speeds of perhaps 30 mph. (This shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone who has witnessed the surprisingly frantic, not to mention hilarious, way that ostriches run, like giant 40-mph feather dusters having panic attacks.)
And we might also look for clues in the terror birds’ living cousins, the seriemas, for further speculation. These South American birds are only a couple of feet tall, but are nonetheless adept hunters, snagging lizards and rodents and such with their talons and bashing them on rocks to shatter their bones.
I included this fairly ugly photograph because it’s so crummy that it almost makes the terror bird look real, like bigfoot in that grainy video. Also, I like how disgusted this guy is by his creation. Such is the tortured existence of the artist, I suppose. |
But Chiappe dismisses the notion that such a powerfully built creature was anything but a predator. The terror birds, he argues, sported truly massive heads relative to body size, much like modern eagles and very much unlike modern omnivorous terrestrial birds like emus and ostriches and cassowaries.
“I think that personally you can come up with all these very rather innovative views, but I think that it makes a lot of sense that these animals were predators,” he said. “It’s just the same when someone came up with the idea that T. rex was a scavenger. I’m sure they ate dead meals, but I’m sure it killed.”
“Maybe [the terror birds’] bite force was not strong enough,” he added, “maybe they were limited to preying on certain animals, but that doesn’t make them in my opinion a non-predatory bird.”
A terror bird freaks right out about how poorly its shadow was drawn. |
Terror birds made their way up into what is now the southern United States, while North America’s top predators — bears and big cats — colonized South America. “So they had to face new competition for the same resources,” said Chiappe, “and that combined with perhaps changes in climate they may not have been able to cope with and that may have impacted their hunting strategies, probably drove them to extinction.”
Read more at Wired Science
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