The scientific name commemorates the
Australian naturalist
George Bennett. He was the first scientist to examine these birds after a few were brought to Australia aboard a ship. Recognising them as a new species of cassowary, he sent specimens back to
England, where other
taxonomists confirmed his perception. On the west side of
Cenderawasih Bay, western
Papua, there is a distinctive form that may merit a split.
C. papuanus is the tentative name. There are two recognized subspecies •
C. b. bennetti - found throughout New Guinea except the
Vogelkop Peninsula, as well as
Yapen Island and
New Britain •
C. b. westermanni - found on the Vogelkop Peninsula A third subspecies,
Casuarius bennetti papuanus, may exist based on a specimen collected in 1875 of unknown origin. This name is sometimes applied to
C. b. westermanni subspecies, and may represent a distinct species, but the taxonomy is still unresolved. The Karam or
Kalam people of the
New Guinea Highlands classify
bats and flying birds as one group, , and the
cassowaries, very large, wingless, flightless birds as another, ''''
. Yaket
are bony with wings and fly in the air, while kobtiy'' are bony without wings and are terrestrial and of the forest. They distinguish kobtiy from other bony, wingless animals because kobtiy are not
quadrupedal like
dogs and
lizards and are not limbless like
snakes. (See
Kalam languages.)
John Gould first identified the dwarf cassowary from a specimen from
New Britain, in 1857. ==Description==