Aldabra brush warbler

Aldabra brush warbler
Conservation status

Extinct  (1986)  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Acrocephalidae
Genus: Nesillas
Species: N. aldabrana
Binomial name
Nesillas aldabrana
Benson & Penny, 1968
Synonyms

Nesillas aldabranus (lapsus)

The Aldabra brush warbler (Nesillas aldabrana) is an extinct bird in the acrocephalid warbler family. It was endemic to the atoll of Aldabra in the Seychelles.

Description

This bird reached a total length of 18–20 cm. The wings were approximately 6.3 cm and the tail was 8.6 cm.

Discovery and extinction

The Aldabra brush warbler was discovered by British ornithologists Constantine Walter Benson, Malcolm Penny and Tony Diamond in 1967 and described in 1968 by Constantine Walter Benson and Malcolm Penny on basis of a male, a female and a nest with 3 eggs. Juveniles were never found.

After the discovery the brush warbler has not been seen until a new survey was made by Robert Prys-Jones of the British Museum of Natural History from 1974 to 1976. At the end of 1975 he found six further birds which were all males. The birds were ringed and photographed.

In 1983, only one male was observed and the Aldabra brush warbler was considered as rarest and in its occurrence most restricted bird in the world. It was confined to a 10 ha large coastal strip on the Aldabran island of Malabar. Following intensive surveys, the extinction of this bird was confirmed in 1986. It is listed as officially extinct by the IUCN since 1994.[1]

The possible reasons for its extinction could be attributed to the presence of rats, cats and goats introduced to the atoll many years previously.

References

External links