Trevor H. Worthy


Trevor Henry Worthy is an Australia-based paleozoologist from New Zealand known for his research on moa and other extinct vertebrates.
Worthy grew up in Broadwood, Northland and went to Whangarei Boys’ High School. He began his career as a largely self-taught palaeontologist, after becoming interested in fossils through caving. Worthy completed his BSc and MSc at the University of Waikato, then did a second Master's degree at Victoria University of Welington. In 1987 he described three new leiopelmatid frog species from cave subfossils: the Aurora frog, Markham's frog, and the Waitomo frog. In the 1990s Worthy discovered several fossil bird species new to science, including the long-billed wren in 1991, Scarlett's shearwater in 1991, and the Niue night heron in 1995. In 1991 he also described the Northland skink, a fossil skink species new to science.
In 1998 Worthy excavated subfossil bones in Fiji, where he found remains of the flightless Viti Levu giant pigeon, the Viti Levu scrubfowl, the Viti Levu snipe, the giant Fiji ground frog, and the small freshwater crocodile Volia athollandersoni. The holotypes of these species were deposited in the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.
For years Worthy has been involved in the excavation of Miocene fossils from a prehistoric lake in Central Otago, including the oldest known moa bones, the oldest tuatara bones, and the first known fossil land mammal from New Zealand.
Worthy's research, based in Masterton, Nelson, and Te Papa, had been funded by grants from the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology since 1991, but in 2005 his funding was cut by the Foundation. From 2005 to 2009 he was at the University of Adelaide where he received his Ph.D in 2008. He received a Doctor of Science from the University of Waikato in 2011. He was at the University of New South Wales from 2009 to 2011, back at the University of Adelaide during 2012, and has been at Flinders University since 2013. In May 2019, he ended his 30-year research association with Te Papa at protest to the staff restructuring controversy.
Worthy is author or co-author of numerous research papers about prehistoric life in New Zealand. For the book The Lost World of the Moa he and Richard Holdaway received the D. L. Serventy Medal from the Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union in 2003 for an outstanding published work about Australasian avifauna.