Laricola

Genus of birds From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Laricola is a genus of extinct gull-like birds that lived during the late Oligocene and early Miocene in what is now Europe.[1]

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Laricola
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Charadriiformes
Family: Laricolidae
Genus: Laricola
Mlíkovský, 2002
Type species
Laricola elegans
Species

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Taxonomy

Mlíkovský described the genus Laricola in 2002.[2] Milne-Edwards (1863–1868) had previously classified three of the genus' members (Laricola elegans, L. totanoides, and L. desnoyersii) as Larus.[3][4] The type species is Laricola elegans (Milne-Edwards, 1868). Laricola have "proportionally longer and more slender legs" than extant species of the family Laromorphae.[1]

Laricola fossils stem from France, and allegedly the Czech Republic.[1]

Species

The genus contains five species.[1]

Laricola elegans (Milne-Edwards, 1868)

Laricola totanoides (Milne-Edwards, 1868)

Laricola desnoyersii (Milne-Edwards, 1863)

Laricola intermedia (De Pietri et al., 2014)

Laricola robusta (De Pietri et al., 2014)

References

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