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| Dodo (Raphus cucullatus) Extinct by Wikipedia |
Which doeth great things past finding out; yea, and wonders without number. (Job 9:10 KJV)"When Portuguese and early Dutch colonists began to inhabit the small tropical island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean, from the early 1500s onwards, they found the island to be the home of a very unusual bird. This bird was as large as a turkey, of ungainly build, with short curly tail feathers and tiny wings. It had a strong black beak with a horny hook at the end. It was so unafraid of man that the Portuguese named it doudo, meaning ‘simpleton’, because it was so trusting they were easily able to hit it on the head and kill it for food. Hence the English name dodo.
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| Drawings of a dodo from the Journal of VOC ship Gelderland 1601-1603 |
The Dodo was considered stupid or dull-witted because it would let the sailors and travelers walk up to it and club it. The bird had had no natural enemies and so was not afraid. They lived and nested on the ground. When it became extinct, they said it was the way of evolution (survival of fittest), but it has later shown that it was by the direct intervention of man and his introduced dogs and pigs. The bird was not a "dodo" but was a Dodo, a very useful bird. (A play on words) The bird was in the pigeon family they decided and would have placed them in the Columbiformes Order and in the Columbidae Family.
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| Nicobar Pigeon at Lowry Park Zoo by Dan |
"Also on Mauritius at the time was a tree known as Calvaria major (Today know as the Tambalacoque (Sideroxylon grandiflorum) or Dodo Tree). At that time it was quite common on the island, but by the 1970s only 13 of these Calvaria trees were left. All 13 were more than 300 years old, and though they produced healthy looking seeds each year, none ever managed to germinate. The trees had puzzled botanists for centuries, for their numbers had strangely begun to decline and no new trees were taking root. Calvaria major seemed destined to go the way of the dodo, but the tree was dying out for no perceptible reason.
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| Tambalacoque or Calvaria major Tree© |
Without the grinding of the dodo’s gizzard to weaken the thick protective wall, the seed was trapped inside its hard case. When the dodo became extinct just over 300 years ago, Calvaria major’s seeds had no way of germinating. So no new trees grew.![]() |
| Tambalacoque (Calvaria Major) Seeds©© |
Today they have used Turkeys, which have a digestive system like the Dodo's, to eat and help break up the the Calvaria major seeds which helps it to germinate. They have even used Gemstone Polishers to help break up the very hard shelled seeds. The result was quite convincing since many seeds germinated.
"If this theory of symbiosis between the tree and the dodo is nowadays contested, it is nevertheless widely discussed because it helps to understand how species are related, and the role played by humans in maintaining this balance."
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out! (Romans 11:33 KJV)Our Creator God has so many more of these displays of His Glory in the things that have been "Formed by Him."
Other Posts in this Series:
- Formed by Him - An Introduction
- Sword-Billed Hummingbirds
- Copper Birds
- Oxpeckers
- See Birds that Drink Sea Water
See Also: (Various sources from the internet)
- Formed by Him Series (on Lee's Blog)
- The dodo bird ... an example of survival of the fittest
- Dodo Bird – Not A Failure
- Dodo from Jungle Store
- Calvaria Tree
- Dodo - Wikipedia





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