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dodo

 
Dictionary: do·do   (') pronunciation
n., pl., -does, or -dos.
  1. A large, clumsy, flightless bird (Raphus cucullatus), formerly of the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean, that has been extinct since the late 17th century.
  2. Informal. One who is out-of-date, as in dress or ideas.
  3. Informal. A stupid person; an idiot.

[Portuguese dodó, alteration of obsolete Dutch dodors : Dutch dot, tuft of feathers + obsolete Dutch ors, tail (from Middle Dutch ærs).]


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Restoration of a dodo (Raphus cucullatus)
(click to enlarge)
Restoration of a dodo (Raphus cucullatus) (credit: Courtesy of the Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University)
Extinct flightless bird (Raphus cucullatus) of Mauritius, first seen by Portuguese sailors about 1507. Humans and the animals they introduced had exterminated the dodo by 1681. It weighed about 50 lbs (23 kg) and had blue-gray plumage, a big head, a 9-in. (23-cm) blackish bill with a reddish hooked tip, small useless wings, stout yellow legs, and a tuft of curly feathers high on its rear end. The Réunion solitaire (R. solitarius), also driven to extinction, may have been a white version of the dodo. Partial museum specimens and skeletons are all that remain of the dodo.

For more information on dodo, visit Britannica.com.

Raphus cucullatus

TAXONOMY

Struthio cucullatus Linne, 1758, Mauritius (the name Didus ineptus Linne, 1766, used in older literature).

OTHER COMMON NAMES

French: Dronte de Mourice; German: Dronte; Spanish: Dronte de Mauricio.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

Large turkey-like bird. Contemporary paintings of this species, based on live birds or traveler's descriptions, show grayish plumage, darker above and lighter below, yellowish white wings with five to six larger feathers, and a tail with five curled feathers. The hooked bill was deep yellow with a horny sheath on the upper and lower mandibles. The skin on the face and around the bill was dull gray and bare of feathers.

DISTRIBUTION

Mauritius, a small (720 mi2; 1,865 km2) volcanic island about 500 mi (800 km) east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean.

HABITAT

Woodlands.

BEHAVIOR

The most extensive record of the dodo comes from Volquard Iversen, who was shipwrecked on Mauritius for five days in 1662 (not in 1669 as indicated in some accounts). Iversen did not find the dodo on the mainland but did see it on an islet that was isolated from pigs and monkeys but that was still accessible by foot at low tide. Iversen wrote: "Amongst other birds were those that men in the Indies call doddaerssen; they were larger than geese but not able to fly. Instead of wings they had small flaps; but they could run very fast." He wrote that after catching them, other dodos would run up when the captive screamed ("When we held one by the leg he let out a cry, others came running forward to help the prisoner, and were themselves caught"). One Dutch sailor described dodos in 1631 as "very serene or majestic, they showed themselves to us with an extremely dark face with open beak, very dapper and bold in their walk, would hardly move out of our way."

FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET

Dodos reportedly ate fruit. Dodos swallowed stones apparently to aid the breakdown of food in the crop. This species apparently had a seasonal fat cycle. A possible mutualistic relationship existed between dodos and the tambalacoque tree, with passage of the tree's seed through the dodo's gut promoting the seed's germination.

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY

Dodos nested on the ground and laid a one-egg clutch. The egg was described by François Cauche in 1651 as being the same size as a half-penny roll. Cauche used this same comparison for the egg of the great white pelican (Pelecanus onocrotalus), which has a 6.3 oz (180 g) egg. The general relationship between egg mass and incubation period suggests that the dodo's incubation period was about 37 days.

CONSERVATION STATUS

Extinct. The Mascarene Islands had been known to Arab navigators prior to European contact but nothing of their exploration of these islands is known other than the appearance of the islands on their maps. For Europeans, the existence of Mauritius was first recorded in 1507 by Portugese sailors, and until 1598 it remained uninhabited except for pigs, goats, and fowl that were stocked on the island. The primary cause of extinction of the dodo is likely to have been egg predation by introduced pigs, monkeys, and cats, even though dodos were slaughtered in large numbers by sailors. Dodos were very rare by 1640, although some survived to 1662, at least, on offshore islets. The last sighting of a dodo was recorded somewhere between 1665 and 1670, but it is an unconfirmed report.

SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS

Dodos were a source of fresh meat for crews and passengers of ships traveling in the Indian Ocean. The dodo is the first species to be counted as becoming extinct because of human activity.

Word Origins: dodo
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from Portuguese
This word originated in Portugal

It was a stupid bird, and that is what the Portuguese called it when one of their world-ranging expeditions found it on the remote Indian Ocean island of Mauritius. In Portuguese, dodo means stupid or silly. An Englishman visiting Mauritius in 1628 reported the name in a letter, writing of "a strange fowle, which I had at the Iland mauritius, called by the portingalls a DoDo." The clumsy, squat birds were good eating and could not fly, so they could not escape capture by hungry sailors. Three or four dodos were said to be enough to feed a hundred men. It is not surprising that before the seventeenth century was over dodos were extinct.

But their reputation was not. With the image of the dodo in mind, speakers of English have used dodo ever since as a four-letter word to express exasperation with a stupid person or stupid behavior. Reflection on the fate of the bird gave us, as early as 1904, a proverbial phrase, dead as a dodo, to go along with the much earlier dead as a doornail or dead as a herring.

Because the Portuguese were first among Europeans to voyage to remote parts of the earth, through their palaver (1735) and savvy (1785) they obtained well over a hundred exotic words that later made their way into English. These include molasses (1582), pagoda (1588), flamingo (1565), emu (1656), the coco of coconut (1613), caste (1613), and back home, port (1691), a kind of wine made in the Portuguese city of Oporto.

Portuguese is an Indo-European language of the Romance family, descended from Latin and a close relative of Spanish. The two languages are so close that it is sometimes hard to tell which one is the source of an English word. Words that could just as well have come from either Spanish or Portuguese include junta (1622) and albatross (1672). Nearly all of the 10 million inhabitants of Portugal speak Portuguese, of course. Brazil adds 165 million, and there are a few million more in the rest of the world.



 
dodo, a flightless forest-dwelling bird of Mauritius, extinct since the late 17th cent. The dodo was closely related to the two species of solitaire bird, extinct flightless giants found on the other islands in the Mascarene Islands. Although related to the pigeon, the dodo was larger than the wild turkey. The plumage was dark gray with a whitish breast, tail, and wings, and the large black bill had a horny terminal cap. The dodo laid only one egg at a time, on the ground. Although the bird's flesh was tough and unpalatable, European sailors and the pigs and rats they brought to Mauritius slaughtered the birds and destroyed its eggs, and it became extinct in roughly 50 years. The dodo appears in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, where it may be the author's surrogate.


Wikipedia: Dodo
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Dodo
Fossil range: Late Holocene
Dodo reconstruction reflecting new research at Oxford University Museum of Natural History
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Columbiformes
Family: Columbidae
Subfamily: Raphinae
Genus: Raphus
Brisson, 1760
Species: R. cucullatus
Binomial name
Raphus cucullatus
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Former range (in red)
Synonyms
  • Struthio cucullatus Linnaeus, 1758
  • Didus ineptus Linnaeus 1766

The dodo (Raphus cucullatus) was a flightless bird endemic to the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius. Related to pigeons and doves, it stood about a meter tall, weighing about 20 kilograms (44 lb), living on fruit and nesting on the ground.

The dodo has been extinct since the mid-to-late 17th century.[1] It is commonly used as the archetype of an extinct species because its extinction occurred during recorded human history, and was directly attributable to human activity, hence the phrase "going the way of the Dodos."

The phrase "dead as a dodo" means undoubtedly and unquestionably dead, whilst the phrase "to go the way of the dodo" means to become extinct or obsolete, to fall out of common usage or practice, or to become a thing of the past.

Contents

Discovery and etymology

Drawings of the dodo from the travel journal of the VOC ship Gelderland (1601–1603)

The first known descriptions of the bird were made by the Dutch. They called the Mauritius bird the walghvogel ("wallow bird" or "loathsome bird") in reference to its taste. Although many later writings say that the meat tasted bad, the early journals only say that the meat was tough but good, though not as good as the abundantly available pigeons.[2] The name walgvogel was used for the first time in the journal of vice-admiral Wybrand van Warwijck who visited the island in 1598 and named it Mauritius.

The etymology of the word dodo is not clear. Some ascribe it to the Dutch word dodoor for "sluggard", but it probably is related to dodaars ("knot-arse"), referring to the knot of feathers on the hind end. The first recording of the word dodaerse is in captain Willem van Westsanen's journal in 1602.[3] Thomas Herbert used the word dodo in 1627[4] but it is unclear whether he was the first one, for the Portuguese had already visited the island in 1507, but as far as is known did not mention the bird. Nevertheless, according to Encarta Dictionary and Chambers Dictionary of Etymology, "dodo" derives from Portuguese doudo (currently doido) meaning "fool" or "crazy".[5][6] However, the present Portuguese name for the bird, dodô, is taken from the internationally used word dodo.

David Quammen considered the idea that dodo was an onomatopoeic approximation of the bird's own call, a two-note pigeony sound like "doo-doo".[7]

In 1606 Cornelis Matelief de Jonge wrote an important description of the dodo, some other birds, plants and animals on the island.[8]

Systematics and evolution

An illustration by Mughal artist Ustad Mansur, one of the first illustrations of the Dodo

The dodo was a close relative of modern pigeons and doves. mtDNA cytochrome b and 12S rRNA sequences[9] analysis suggests that the dodo's ancestors diverged from those of its closest known relative, the Rodrigues Solitaire (which is also extinct), around the Paleogene-Neogene boundary.[10] As the Mascarenes are of volcanic origin and less than 10 million years old, both birds' ancestors remained most likely capable of flight for considerable time after their lineages' separation. The same study has been interpreted to show that the Southeast Asian Nicobar Pigeon is the closest living relative of the dodo and the Réunion Solitaire.[11]

However, the proposed phylogeny is rather questionable regarding the relationships of other taxa[12] and must therefore be considered hypothetical pending further research; considering biogeographical data, it is very likely to be erroneous. All that can be presently said with any certainty is that the ancestors of the didine birds were pigeons from Southeast Asia or the Wallacea, which agrees with the origin of most of the Mascarenes' birds. Whether the dodo and Rodrigues Solitaire were actually closest to the Nicobar Pigeon among the living birds, or whether they are closer to other groups of the same radiation such as Ducula, Treron, or Goura pigeons is not clear at the moment.

For a long time, the dodo and the Rodrigues Solitaire (collectively termed "didines") were placed in a family of their own, the Raphidae. This was because their relationships to other groups of birds (such as rails) had yet to be resolved. As of recently, it appears more warranted to include the didines as a subfamily Raphinae in the Columbidae.

Painting of an albino dodo, previously mislabeled as "Raphus solitarius".

The supposed "White Dodo" is now thought to be based on misinterpreted reports of the Réunion Sacred Ibis and paintings of apparently albinistic dodos;[13] a higher frequency of albinos is known to occur occasionally in island species (see also Lord Howe Swamphen).

Morphology and flightlessness

Skeleton of a dodo put together from bones found in a marshy pool on Mauritius, and the dried leg of a specimen which was brought alive to Europe about the year 1600, in Natural History Museum

In October 2005, part of the Mare aux Songes, the most important site of dodo remains, was excavated by an international team of researchers. Many remains were found, including bones from birds of various stages of maturity,[14] and several bones obviously belonging to the skeleton of one individual bird and preserved in natural position.[5] These findings were made public in December 2005 in the Naturalis in Leiden. Before this, few associated dodo specimens were known, most of the material consisting of isolated and scattered bones. Dublin's Natural History Museum and the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, among others, have a specimen assembled from these disassociated remains. A Dodo egg is on display at the East London museum in South Africa.

Manchester Museum's bones.

Until recently, the most intact remains, currently on display at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, were one individual's partly skeletal foot and head which contain the only known soft tissue remains of the species. Manchester Museum has a small collection of Dodo bones on display.

The remains of the last known stuffed dodo had been kept in Oxford's Ashmolean Museum, but in the mid-18th century, the specimen – save the pieces remaining now – had entirely decayed and was ordered to be discarded by the museum's curator or director in or around 1755.

In June 2007, adventurers exploring a cave in Mauritius discovered the most complete and well-preserved dodo skeleton ever.[15]

1626 dodo image by Roelant Savery, drawn after a stuffed specimen – note that it has two left feet and that the bird is obese from captivity.

According to artists' renditions, the Dodo had greyish plumage, a 23-centimeter (9-inch) bill with a hooked point, very small wings, stout yellow legs, and a tuft of curly feathers high on its rear end. Dodos were very large birds, weighing about 23 kg (50 pounds). The sternum was insufficient to support flight; these ground-bound birds evolved to take advantage of an island ecosystem with no predators.

The traditional image of the dodo is of a fat, clumsy bird, hence the synonym Didus ineptus, but this view has been challenged in recent times. The general opinion of scientists today is that the old drawings showed overfed captive specimens.[16] As Mauritius has marked dry and wet seasons, the dodo probably fattened itself on ripe fruits at the end of the wet season to live through the dry season when food was scarce; contemporary reports speak of the birds' "greedy" appetite. In captivity, with food readily available, the birds became overfed very easily.

Diet

The tambalacoque, also known as the "dodo tree", was hypothesized by Stanley Temple to have been eaten from by Dodos, and only by passing through the digestive tract of the dodo could the seeds germinate; he claimed that the tambalacocque was now nearly extinct due to the dodo's disappearance. He force-fed seventeen tambalacoque fruits to Wild Turkeys and three germinated. Temple did not try to germinate any seeds from control fruits not fed to turkeys so the effect of feeding fruits to turkeys was unclear. Temple also overlooked reports on tambalacoque seed germination by A. W. Hill in 1941 and H. C. King in 1946, who found the seeds germinated, albeit very rarely, without abrading.[17][18][19][20]

Extinction

Dronte (17th century)

As with many animals that have evolved in isolation from significant predators, the dodo was entirely fearless of people, and this, in combination with its flightlessness, made it easy prey for humans.[21] However, journals are full of reports regarding the bad taste and tough meat of the dodo, while other local species such as the Red Rail were praised for their taste. However, when humans first arrived on Mauritius, they also brought with them other animals that had not existed on the island before, including dogs, pigs, cats, rats, and Crab-eating Macaques, which plundered the dodo nests, while humans destroyed the forests where the birds made their homes;[22] currently, the impact these animals – especially the pigs and macaques – had on the dodo population is considered to have been more severe than that of hunting. The 2005 expedition's finds are apparently of animals killed by a flash flood; such mass mortalities would have further jeopardized an already extinction-prone species.[23]

Dodo skeleton, Natural History Museum (England)

Although there are scattered reports of mass killings of dodos for provisioning of ships, archaeological investigations have hitherto found scant evidence of human predation on these birds. Some bones of at least two dodos were found in caves at Baie du Cap which were used as shelters by fugitive slaves and convicts in the 17th century, but due to their isolation in high, broken terrain, were not easily accessible to dodos naturally.[24]

There is some controversy surrounding the extinction date of the dodo. Roberts & Solow state that "the extinction of the Dodo is commonly dated to the last confirmed sighting in 1662, reported by shipwrecked mariner Volkert Evertsz" (Evertszoon), but many other sources suggest the more conjectural date of 1681. Roberts & Solow point out that because the sighting prior to 1662 was in 1638, the dodo was likely already very rare by the 1660s, and thus a disputed report from 1674 cannot be dismissed out-of-hand.[25] Statistical analysis of the hunting records of Isaac Johannes Lamotius give a new estimated extinction date of 1693, with a 95% confidence interval of 1688 to 1715. Considering more circumstantial evidence such as travelers' reports and the lack of good reports after 1689,[24] it is likely that the dodo became extinct before 1700; the last Dodo died a little more than a century after the species' discovery in 1581.[26]

Few took particular notice of the extinct bird. By the early 19th century it seemed altogether too strange a creature, and was believed by many to be a myth. With the discovery of the first batch of dodo bones in the Mauritian swamp, the Mare aux Songes, and the reports written about them by George Clarke, government schoolmaster at Mahébourg, from 1865 on,[27] interest in the bird was rekindled. In the same year in which Clarke started to publish his reports, the newly vindicated bird was featured as a character in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. With the popularity of the book, the dodo became a well-known and easily recognizable icon of extinction.[28]

Cultural significance

The dodo is used by many environmental organizations that promote the protection of endangered species, such as the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust and the Jersey Zoological Park, founded by Gerald Durrell.[29]

The dodo's significance as one of the best-known extinct animals and its singular appearance has led to its use in literature and popular culture to symbolize a concept or object that will or has become out of date, as in the expression "dead as a dodo" or "gone the way of the dodo".[30][31]

The dodo rampant appears on the coat of arms of Mauritius.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2004). Raphus cucullatus. 2006. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. www.iucnredlist.org. Retrieved on 2006-12-07. Database entry includes justification for why this species is listed as extinct.
  2. ^ A trve report of the gainefull, prosperous, and speedy voiage to Iava in the East Indies, performed by a fleete of eight ships of Amsterdam: which set forth from Texell in Holland, the first of Maie 1598. Stilo Novo. Whereof foure returned againe the 19. of Iuly Anno 1599. in lesse thaen 15 moneths: the other foure went forward from Iava for the Moluccas
  3. ^ Staub, France (1996): Dodo and solitaires, myths and reality. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Arts & Sciences of Mauritius 6: 89-122 HTML fulltext
  4. ^ Strickland, H.E. (1848) The Dodo and its Kindred London: Reeve, Benham and Reeve. p.128
  5. ^ a b "Dodo skeleton find in Mauritius". BBC News. 2006-06-24. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5113372.stm. Retrieved 2006-08-28. 
  6. ^ The Portuguese word doudo or doido may itself be a loanword from Old English (cf. English "dolt").
  7. ^ Quammen, David (1996): The Song of the Dodo: Island Biogeography in an Age of Extinction. Touchstone, New York. ISBN 0684827123
  8. ^ Staub, France. "Le musée du Dodo". Potomitan. http://www.potomitan.info/dodo/c32.php. Retrieved 2009-01-18. 
  9. ^ Shapiro, Beth; Sibthorpe, Dean; Rambaut, Andrew; Austin, Jeremy; Wragg, Graham M.; Bininda-Emonds, Olaf R. P.; Lee, Patricia L. M. & Cooper, Alan (2002): Flight of the Dodo. Science 295: 1683. doi:10.1126/science.295.5560.1683 (HTML abstract) Supplementary information
  10. ^ See Raphidae as for why the date "25 mya" is suspect
  11. ^ "DNA yields dodo family secrets". BBC News. 2002-02-28. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/1847431.stm. Retrieved 2006-09-07. 
  12. ^ Johnson, Kevin P. and Dale H. Clayton (2000): Nuclear and Mitochondrial Genes Contain Similar Phylogenetic. Signal for Pigeons and Doves (Aves: Columbiformes). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 14(1): 141–151. PDF fulltext
  13. ^ Cheke, Anthony S. and Julian Pender Hume. "The white dodo of Réunion Island". http://www.eupjournals.com/doi/pdf/10.3366/anh.2004.31.1.57?cookieSet=1. Retrieved 2009-01-18. 
  14. ^ "Scientists find 'mass dodo grave'". BBC News. 2005-12-24. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4556928.stm. Retrieved 2006-09-07. 
  15. ^ "Dodo Skeleton Found on Island, May Yield Extinct Bird's DNA". National Geographic. 2007-07-03. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/07/070703-dodo.html. Retrieved 2007-07-09. 
  16. ^ Kitchener, A. On the external appearance of the dodo, Raphus cucullatus. Archives of natural History, 20, 1993.
  17. ^ Temple, Stanley A. (1977): Plant-animal mutualism: coevolution with Dodo leads to near extinction of plant. Science 197(4306): 885-886. HTML abstract
  18. ^ Hill, A. W. (1941): The genus Calvaria, with an account of the stony endocarp and germination of the seed, and description of the new species. Annals of Botany 5(4): 587-606. PDF fulltext (requires user account)
  19. ^ King, H. C. (1946). Interim Report on Indigenous Species in Mauritius. Government Printer, Port Louis, Mauritius.
  20. ^ Witmer, M. C. & Cheke, A. S. (1991): The dodo and the tambalacoque tree: an obligate mutualism reconsidered. Oikos 61(1): 133-137. HTML abstract
  21. ^ "Scientists pinpoint dodo's demise". BBC News. 2003-11-20. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3281323.stm. Retrieved 2006-09-07. 
  22. ^ a b Jonathan Fryer (2002-09-14). "Bringing the dodo back to life". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/2255991.stm. Retrieved 2006-09-07. 
  23. ^ Tim Cocks (2006-06-04). "Natural disaster may have killed dodos". Reuters. http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/ancient/AncientRepublish_1678225.htm. Retrieved 2006-08-30. 
  24. ^ a b Janoo, Anwar (2005): Discovery of isolated dodo bones [Raphus cucullatus (L.), Aves, Columbiformes] from Mauritius cave shelters highlights human predation, with a comment on the status of the family Raphidae Wetmore, 1930. Annales de Paléontologie 91: 167–180. [English with French abstract] DOI:10.1016/j.annpal.2004.12.002 (HTML abstract) Hume et al. ref probably too.
  25. ^ Roberts, David L. & Solow, Andrew R. (2003): Flightless birds: When did the dodo become extinct? Nature 425(6964): 245. doi:10.1038/426245a (HTML abstract)
  26. ^ Dodo Bird FAQs - WikiFAQ - Answers to Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
  27. ^ Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland was published in 1865.
  28. ^ Mayell, Hillary (2002-02-28). "Extinct Dodo Related to Pigeons, DNA Shows". National Geographic News. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/02/0227_0228_dodo.html. Retrieved 2009-01-19. 
  29. ^ Dee pa Unhook (2006-09-26). "Mauritius: Footprints From the Past". expresser's. http://allafrica.com/stories/200609260428.html. Retrieved 2006-09-26.  (requires subscription)
  30. ^ Steve Miller (2006-09-25). "First The Dodo, Now Full-Size SUV". Brand Week. http://www.brandweek.com/bw/news/recent_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003156227. Retrieved 2006-09-26. 
  31. ^ "Water ford Wildlife". Water ford Today. 2006-01-01. http://www.waterford-today.ie/index.php?id=19474&what=2&issue=320. Retrieved 2006-09-26. 

External links


Translations: Dodo
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - dronte, fortidslevning, tørvetriller

Nederlands (Dutch)
dodo, ouderwets persoon, domoor

Français (French)
n. - dronte, dodo

Deutsch (German)
n. - (zo.) Dodo, (zo.) Dronte

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (ορνιθ.) διδώ, δοδώ

idioms:

  • dead as a dodo    πεθαμένος, ξεγραμμένος, ξεπερασμένος, ξοφλημένος

Italiano (Italian)
persona antiquata

Português (Portuguese)
n. - ave (f) extinta da Malásia (Ornit.) (Zool.), pessoa (f) estúpida (gír.)

Русский (Russian)
дронт, старый хрыч, болван

Español (Spanish)
n. - ave extinta de la isla de Mauricio, vejestorio

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - zool. dront (fågel)

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
古代巨鸟, 渡渡鸟

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 古代巨鳥, 渡渡鳥

한국어 (Korean)
n. - (현재는 멸종한 새의 일종) 도도

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - ドードー, 時代遅れの人

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) طائر منقرض كبير الحجم لا يستطيع الطيران‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮מיושן, טיפש, דודו (עוף שנכחד), לא-פעיל‬


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