It is presumed to have gone extinct shortly after its discovery in 1773. The causes of its decline were likely habitat loss due to forest clearing, hunting, and
invasive species. There are only two museum specimens known to exist. The date of their origin was discussed, with
Erwin Stresemann (1950) and
James Greenway (1958) suggesting 1773 or 1774. However, in 1979 the ornithologist David G. Medway from New Zealand claimed that the two specimens were taken in November 1777 during the third circumnavigation by
James Cook. He based the claim on the travel diary entries by
Joseph Banks. The specimens are in the
Natural History Museum in London and in the
Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna. ==References==