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Branta

The black geese or white-cheeked geese of the genus Branta are waterfowl belonging to the true goose and swan subfamily Anserinae. They occur in the northern coastal regions of the Palearctic and all over North America, migrating to more southerly coasts in winter, and as resident birds in the Hawaiian Islands. Alone in the Southern Hemisphere, a self-sustaining feral population derived from introduced Canada geese is also found in New Zealand.

Taxonomy
The genus Branta was introduced by the Austrian naturalist Giovanni Antonio Scopoli in 1769. The name is a Latinised form of Old Norse Brandgás meaning burnt as in "burnt (black) goose". The type species is the brant goose (Branta bernicla). Ottenburghs and colleagues published a study in 2016 that established the phylogenetic relationships between the species. }} Species list The genus contains six living species. }} }} }} Two species have been described from subfossil remains found in the Hawaiian Islands, where they became extinct in prehistoric times: • Nēnē-nui or wood-walking goose, Branta hylobadistes (prehistoric) :Similar but hitherto undescribed remains are also known from Kauaʻi and Oʻahu. • Giant Hawaii goose, Branta rhuax (prehistoric), formerly Geochen rhuax The relationships of the enigmatic Geochen rhuax, formerly known only from parts of a single bird's skeleton which was damaged due to apparently dying in a lava flow, were long unresolved. After reexamination of the subfossil material and comparisons with other subfossil bones from the island of Hawaii assigned to the genus Branta, it was redescribed as Branta rhuax in 2013. While a presumed relation between B. rhuax and the shelducks, proposed by Lester Short in 1970, has thus been refuted, bones of a shelduck-like bird have been found more recently on Kaua‘i. Similarly, two bones found on Oʻahu indicate the erstwhile presence of a gigantic waterfowl on this island. Its relationships relative to this genus and those of the moa-nalos, enormous goose-like dabbling ducks, are completely undeterminable at present. • Branta thessaliensis Boev & Koufos, 2006 (Late Miocene of Perivolaki, Greece) • Branta dickeyi Miller 1924 (Late Pliocene – Late Pleistocene of Western U.S.) • Branta esmeralda Burt 1929 (Early Pliocene of Nevada, U.S.) • Branta howardae Miller 1930 (Early Pliocene of California, U.S.) • Branta propinqua Shufeldt 1892 (Middle Pleistocene of Fossil Lake, Oregon, U.S.) ==Footnotes==
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