A new study has put even more genetic distance between the extinct moa and their old bush mates, the New Zealand kiwi.
Rather, new research led by Toronto-based New Zealand scientist Professor Allan Baker suggests ther giant birds were more closely related to a flying South American bird still alive today than our national icon.
The study, published online in Molecular Biology and Evolution, used DNA to analyse family ties between a range of ratites, or flightless birds.
The South American tinamous, one of the world's most ancient living groups of bird, can fly and are not categorised as ratites, but are considered close relatives because of the shared structure of their palate bones.
In contrast, recent molecular studies suggested they may be more closely related to the extinct moa within the ratites.