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Centropus colossus

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Centropus colossus

Centropus colossus is an extinct species of coucal from the Middle Pleistocene or Late Pleistocene of Australia. It was described from submerged subfossil material collected from Fossil Cave in the south-east of South Australia. It was larger than any of its living congeners and was one of the largest cuckoos in the world.

The first remains of Centropus colossus were discovered in 1979 by an expedition to Fossil Cave (formerly known as Green Waterhole Cave), which is 24 kilometres (15 mi) west of Mount Gambier, South Australia. They were subsequently described in 1985 by Robert Baird alongside other avian fossils from the same cave deposit. The holotype (SAM P24240) is a slightly damaged humerus. Additional remains were described in 2016. These include a damaged humerus and near complete femur. A second, slightly smaller femur was found within the Flinders University palaeontology collection while the publication was in press.

The specific epithet is derived from the Latin word colossus, in reference to its great size.

The humerus of Centropus colossus has a backwards facing shaft and a cranioventrally facing head. The pronounced notch on the humeral head (incisura capitis) is wide and positioned more proximodistally compared to other species of coucal. A large ventral tubercule is present on the proximal surface of the humerus. In addition, it also possesses a small pneumotricipital fossa. The deltopectoral crest is short and robust. On the back side of the distal end of the deltopectoral crest is the impression for the pectoral muscle, which is reduced to a prominent scar. The dorsal supracondylar process is low and rounded. A swollen corpus is present near the fossa for the brachialis muscle. The process serving as the attachment point for the flexor carpi ulnaris muscle at the distal end of the humerus (processus flexorius) is dorsoventrally wide.

Its femur differs from that of the extant pheasant coucal by having a more straighter and thicker shaft, and a proportionally larger femoral head. In addition, both the medial and lateral condyles are proportionally deeper and wider.

Shute et al. (2016) used a variety of methods the estimate the weight of Centropus colossus. They found that it had a body mass range of 1-2.3 kg (2.2-5 lbs), making it one of the largest species of coucal. However, it was slightly smaller than Centropus maximus.

In their 2016 study, Shute and colleagues performed a cladistic analysis using the matrix data from Hughes (2000). After including all cuculid taxa (both living and extinct), it yielded poorly resolved results. Centropus colossus, along with all other Australian fossil coucals, didn't join any clade within the polytomy. The authors subsequently added C. colossus individually into the matrix, which produced similar results. Its poor resolution was said to be caused by the lack of material, and was excluded from further analyses.

Coucals were possibly part of a faunal interchange with Australia, arriving sometime during the Miocene or Early Pleistocene through Papua New Guinea. They likely dispersed into south-eastern, as well as south-western, Australia through vegetation corridors.

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