Discovery The first fossil swan bones in New Zealand were recovered from
Monck's Cave,
Sumner, near
Christchurch, in September 1889. The landowner Henry Monck had discovered bones which he presented to John T. Meeson and
Henry Forbes, Director of the
Canterbury Museum. They were found associated with
moa and fish bones, seal hair,
adzes, spears, and sinkers, indicating the swans were hunted by early
Māori inhabitants of the cave. Forbes described the new swan species from three
coracoids and two partial
humeri, naming it
Chenopis sumnerensis, from its resemblance to the Australian black swan
Chenopis atrata (now
Cygnus atratus) and from the type locality of Sumner. Forbes noted that "This Sumner cave has been closed since the introduction of
Chenopsis atrata into New Zealand [in 1864–1868]" A few years later, Forbes's specimens were rediscovered, and
C. chathamensis became a
junior synonym of
C. sumnerensis. In 1998,
Worthy compared a large collection of
C. sumnerensis from Marfells Beach near
Lake Grassmere with Australian swan bones, but could not find any marked differences in size or proportion. The species was thenceforth considered to be a population of the black swan that had colonised New Zealand in prehistoric times and been exterminated by early
Māori settlers, and all New Zealand subfossil swan bones were assigned to
C. atratus.
Revival of species name Recovery of
ancient DNA from 39 fossil bones in museums allowed the relationship between New Zealand and Australian swans to be re-examined, and it turned out the mainland New Zealand and Chatham Islands populations formed a distinct group, separated from the Australian birds by perhaps 1–2 million years. They proved sufficiently different from
Cygnus atratus to be designated a separate and genetically distinct species, and the name
C. sumnerensis was revived, with two separate subspecies (
C. s. sumnerensis and
C. s. chathamensis) for the mainland New Zealand and Chatham Islands birds, respectively. The researchers chose the
Moriori name
poūwa for the species, from a legend of a large bird that lived in
Te Whanga lagoon on
Chatham Island, and whose bones could still be found in the sand dunes. ==See also==