Horned Screamer

Beez Neez now Chy Whella
Big Bear and Pepe Millard
Mon 6 Sep 2010 22:20
The Horned Screamer

 

 

We loved being introduced to these chaps by Omar along the river bank. Just love their indicator that sticks out from the top of their head.

 

The Horned Screamer (Anhima cornuta) is a member of a small family of birds, the Anhimidae, which occur in wetlands of Tropical South America. There are three screamer species, the other two being the Southern and the Northern Screamer in the genus Chauna. They are related to the ducks, geese and swans, which are in the family Anatidae, but have bills looking more like those of game birds.

 

Description: This is a massive thirty three to thirty eight inches long, weighs around seven and a half pounds, with a small chicken-like bill. The upperparts, head and breast are black, with white speckles on the crown, throat and wing coverts. There is a long quill projecting forward from the crown, which gives this species its name. The belly and under wing coverts are white. It has two sharp spurs on its wings, and feet which are only partially webbed. The Horned Screamer's call, as its name suggests, is a very loud U-WHO or honking YOIK-YOK.

 

Distribution, habitat and behavior: The Horned Screamer is found in lowlands from Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Suriname, French Guiana and Guyana. It is now extinct in Trinidad and Tobago. Despite having declined locally, it remains widespread and is overall fairly common. Its range in Brazil appears to have expanded in recent years. It lives in well-vegetated marshes and feeds on water plants. Its nest is a large pile of floating vegetation anchored in shallow water. Three olive-brown eggs are laid and the young, like those of most Anseriformes, can run as soon as they are hatched.

 

As a symbol: The Horned Screamer is the official bird of the Department of Arauca and the Municipality of Arauca in Colombia. The department and its capital are named after the bird, which is called Arauco in Spanish. The bird also appears in the arms of Tietê, Brazil.

 

 

 

ALL IN ALL A NEW ONE ON US - LOVE HIS INDICATOR