's description of birds collected on the second voyage of
HMS Beagle During the
second voyage of HMS Beagle, the young naturalist
Charles Darwin made many trips on land, and around August 1833 heard from
gauchos in the
Río Negro area of Northern Patagonia about the existence of a smaller rhea, "a very rare bird which they called the Avestruz Petise". He continued searching fruitlessly for this bird, and the
Beagle sailed south, putting in at
Port Desire in southern Patagonia on 23 December. On the following day, Darwin shot a
guanaco (similar to a
llama) which provided them with a Christmas meal, and in the first days of January, the artist
Conrad Martens shot a rhea which they enjoyed eating before Darwin realised that this was the elusive smaller rhea rather than a juvenile, and preserved the head, neck, legs, one wing, and many of the larger feathers. As with his other collections, these were sent to
John Stevens Henslow in Cambridge. On 26 January the
Beagle entered the
Straits of Magellan, and at St Gregory's Bay Darwin met Patagonians he described as "excellent practical naturalists". A half Indian, who had been born in the Northern Provinces, told him that the smaller rheas were the only species this far south, while the larger rheas kept to the north. On an expedition up the
Santa Cruz River, they saw several of the smaller rheas, which were too wary to be approached closely or caught. In 1837, Darwin's rhea was described as
Rhea darwinii (later
synonymized with
R. pennata) by the ornithologist
John Gould in a presentation to the
Zoological Society of London, in which he was followed by Darwin reading a paper on the eggs and distribution of the two species of rheas. When Gould classified Darwin's rhea and the
greater rhea as separate species, he confirmed a serious problem for Darwin. These birds mainly live in different parts of Patagonia, but there is also an overlapping zone where the two species coexist. As every living being had been created in a fixed form, as accepted by the science of his time, they could only change their appearance by a perfect adaptation to their way of life, but would still be the same species. But now he had to deal with two different species. This started to form his idea that species were not fixed at all, but that another mechanism might be at work. ==Conservation==