Jacob Christopher Blokland

@flinders.edu.au

PhD Candidate, Palaeontology Research group, College of Science and Engineering
Flinders University



                       

https://researchid.co/jacobblokland
3

Scopus Publications

32

Scholar Citations

2

Scholar h-index

2

Scholar i10-index

Scopus Publications


  • A new species of Manuherikia (Aves: Anatidae) provides evidence of faunal turnover in the St Bathans Fauna, New Zealand
    Trevor H. Worthy, R. Paul Scofield, Steven W. Salisbury, Suzanne J. Hand, Vanesa L. De Pietri, Jacob C. Blokland, and Michael Archer

    Elsevier BV

  • Chatham island paleocene fossils provide insight into the palaeobiology, evolution, and diversity of early penguins (Aves, sphenisciformes)
    Jacob Blokland, Catherine Reid, Trevor Worthy, Alan Tennyson, Julia Clarke, and R. Scofield

    Coquina Press
    Numerous skeletal remains recovered in situ from the late early to middle Paleocene Takatika Grit of Chatham Island, New Zealand, are among the oldest known fossils attributed to the penguin clade (Aves, Sphenisciformes). They represent a new medium-sized taxon, for which we erect a new genus and species, and a second, notably larger form. These new penguins are analysed in a parsimony and Bayesian framework using an updated and revised phylogenetic matrix, based on morphological and molecular characters, and interpreted as among the most basal of known sphenisciforms, closely related to Waimanu. While sharing numerous characteristics with the earliest wing-propelled divers, the novel taxon records the oldest occurrence of the characteristic penguin tarsometatarsus morphology. These ancient Chatham Island representatives add to a growing number and increased morphological diversity of Paleocene penguins in the New Zealand region, suggesting an origin for the group there. With their addition to other Paleocene penguins, these taxa reveal that sphenisciforms rapidly diversified as non-volant piscivores in the southern oceans following the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. They also provide further evidence for the hypothesis that their origin predates the Paleocene. This implies that stem Sphenisciformes and their sister group, the Procellariiformes, both originated in, and so may be expected to occur in, the Late Cretaceous. Jacob C. Blokland. Biological Sciences, College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Bedford Park 5042, South Australia, Australia. jacob.blokland@flinders.edu.au Catherine M. Reid. School of Earth and Environment, College of Science, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand. catherine.reid@canterbury.ac.nz Trevor H. Worthy. Biological Sciences, College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Bedford Park 5042, South Australia, Australia. trevor.worthy@flinders.edu.au BLOKLAND ET AL.: CHATHAM ISLAND PENGUINS 2 Alan J.D. Tennyson. Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, PO Box 467, Wellington 6140, New Zealand. AlanT@tepapa.govt.nz Julia A. Clarke. Department of Geological Sciences, Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, 2305 Speedway Stop C1160, Austin, TX 78712-1692, USA. Julia_Clarke@jsg.utexas.edu. R. Paul Scofield. Canterbury Museum, Rolleston Avenue, Christchurch 8013, New Zealand. pscofield@canterburymuseum.com

RECENT SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS

  • Skull morphology of the enigmatic Genyornis newtoni Stirling and Zeitz, 1896 (Aves, Dromornithidae), with implications for functional morphology, ecology, and evolution in the
    PL McInerney, JC Blokland, TH Worthy
    Historical Biology 36 (6), 1093–1165 2024

  • Gymnocrecini, Amaurornithini and Pardirallini: three new family-group names for rails, with comments on the taxonomic placement of Zapornia akool (Rallidae)
    G Sangster, JC Blokland, SMS Gregory, EC Dickinson
    Avian Systematics 2 (4), 53–64 2024

  • The Late Pleistocene and Holocene of Oceania
    TH Worthy, PL McInerney, JC Blokland
    Encyclopedia of Quaternary Science, 3rd Edition, 1–20 2023

  • A new species of Manuherikia (Aves: Anatidae) provides evidence of faunal turnover in the St Bathans Fauna, New Zealand
    TH Worthy, RP Scofield, SW Salisbury, SJ Hand, VL De Pietri, ...
    Geobios 70, 87–107 2022

  • Chatham Island Paleocene fossils provide insight into the palaeobiology, evolution, and diversity of early penguins (Aves, Sphenisciformes)
    JC Blokland, CM Reid, TH Worthy, AJD Tennyson, JA Clarke, RP Scofield
    Palaeontologia Electronica, 1–92 2019

  • Bird fossils from the Takatika Grit, Chatham Island, New Zealand.
    JC Blokland
    University of Canterbury 2017

MOST CITED SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS

  • A new species of Manuherikia (Aves: Anatidae) provides evidence of faunal turnover in the St Bathans Fauna, New Zealand
    TH Worthy, RP Scofield, SW Salisbury, SJ Hand, VL De Pietri, ...
    Geobios 70, 87–107 2022
    Citations: 16

  • Chatham Island Paleocene fossils provide insight into the palaeobiology, evolution, and diversity of early penguins (Aves, Sphenisciformes)
    JC Blokland, CM Reid, TH Worthy, AJD Tennyson, JA Clarke, RP Scofield
    Palaeontologia Electronica, 1–92 2019
    Citations: 16