Metechen luti
A reconstruction of the St Bathans goose (Metechen luti). Credit: Artwork by Sasha Votyakova, © Te Papa CC BY 4.0

A newly described fossil goose exhibits that New Zealand’s chook historical past concerned repeated arrivals, extinctions, and fast island evolution.

A uncommon fossil goose discovered within the stays of an historic lake in Central Otago is altering how scientists perceive the chook historical past of Aotearoa New Zealand, in accordance with a researcher on the University of Otago at Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka.

Associate Professor Nic Rawlence, Director of the Otago Paleogenetics Laboratory, coauthored a brand new paper analyzing the fossil and the place it suits within the evolutionary report.

The examine, printed in Historical Biology, brings collectively researchers from Otago, the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, and the University of Cambridge (UK) to research fossils collected close to St Bathans.

Associate Professor Rawlence says the fossil beds within the area include many frequent waterfowl stays, however some species appear only rarely.

Fossil bones reveal a new species

The researchers took another look at all remains that had previously been assigned to geese. They compared those bones with other waterfowl fossils from the site and with a wide range of modern and ancient bird skeletons.

“We determined that the bones included an undescribed species, the size of a small goose,” he says.

The team named the St Bathans goose Meterchen luti, drawing on the nursery rhyme Old Mother Goose. In this case, the name refers to an ancient goose emerging from the mud of a fossil deposit. Meterchen means “mother goose” in ancient Greek, while luti is Latin for “of the mud”.

“The St Bathans goose is not closely related to the recently-extinct giant flightless New Zealand geese (Cnemiornis species) or their Australian cousin, the Cape Barren goose.”

New arrivals reshape evolution

Together with other recent genetic findings, the discovery suggests that the origins of New Zealand’s birds were more complex and changeable than scientists once believed.

Lead author Alan Tennyson, of Te Papa, says many bird species reached New Zealand at different points in geological history. The ancestors of several large birds, including takahē, Forbes’ harrier, and the giant Haast’s eagle, appear to have arrived surprisingly recently, within the past four to five million years.

“An earlier theory argued that the St Bathans goose represented the direct ancestors of giant flightless Cnemiornis geese, implying this lineage had a very long history (of at least 14 million years) in Zealandia,” he says.

“However, this conflicts with genetic evidence suggesting the ancestors of Cnemiornis arrived from Australia only about seven million years ago, which proponents of the earlier theory discarded.

“Our rigorous reassessment supports the later arrival theory.”

Island birds changed quickly

Associate Professor Rawlence says the ancestors of the St Bathans goose reached Zealandia more than 14 million years ago, but their line did not leave surviving descendants.

“Using all the tools in the toolbox, including DNA and fossils, we can reconstruct how the dynamic geological, climatic, and human history of Zealandia has shaped the evolution of Aotearoa fauna in ever more detail,” he says.

“The relatively recent evolution of the giant flightless Cnemiornis geese offers another striking example of rapid morphological change that can occur within a short timeframe on islands. At one meter tall and weighing up to 18kg, these were the largest geese in the world.”

Reference: “A review of fossil goose (Aves: Anserinae) records from the Miocene St Bathans deposits, New Zealand, with the description of a new species” by Alan J. D. Tennyson, Elizabeth M. Steell, Pascale Lubbe, Amy L. Adams, Liam Greer, Alex H. Brown, Laura J. E. Wilson, Timothy C. Campbell, Tobia C. Dale and Nicolas J. Rawlence, 17 February 2026, Historical Biology.
DOI: 10.1080/08912963.2025.2601236

This research was supported by the Te Papa Collection Development Fund (2001–2025), a Phyllis and Eileen Gibbs Travelling Research Fellowship, Newnham College Cambridge, to EMS (2023–2025), a Marsden Fund Fast-Start Grant [16-UOO-096] to NJR (2017–2020), a Marsden Fund Fast-Start Grant [MFP-CTM1601] to V. De Pietri, G. Mayr and R. Scofield (2017–2020), a Kitty Southern Student Research Grant to LG and NJR (2019), Australian Research Council Discovery tasks [DP120100486] to S. Hand, T. Worthy, S. Salisbury, R. Scofield and AJDT (2012-2014) and [DP0770660] to S. Hand and M. Archer (2007–2009), and funding from the Foundation for Research Science and Technology to T. Worthy (2001–2005). Te Papa, the University of Otago, Flinders University, Canterbury Museum, the University of New South Wales, the University of Queensland and numerous volunteers contributed financial and in-kind support.

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