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Seriema

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iSeriemas
Image:Cariama cristata.jpg
Cariama cristata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Gruiformes
Family: Cariamidae
Bonaparte, 1853
Genera and species

Cariama cristata
Chunga burmeisteri

The Seriemas are a small and ancient family of tropical South American birds, belonging to the family Cariamidae, that are related to the rails and bustards.

They are terrestrial birds which run rather than fly (though they are able to fly for short distances.) They have long legs, necks, and tails, but only short wings, reflecting their way of life. They are brownish birds with short bills and erectile crests, found on fairly dry open grasslands.

They feed on insects, snakes and lizards. There are two species.

The two extant species of seriema are thought to be the closest living relatives of a group of gigantic (up to ten feet tall) carnivorous "terror birds", the phorusrhacoids, which are known from fossils from South and North America. Several other related groups, such as the idiornithids and bathornithids were part of Palaeogene faunas in North America and Europe and possibly elsewhere too. However, the fossil record of the seriemas themselves is not good, with a single prehistoric species (Chunga incerta) having been described to date.

The seriemas have an extensible second claw that they can lift from the ground. Although this resembles the dinosaurian sickle claw of velociraptor and its relatives, it is not curved enough to be a real weapon.

[edit] External links

da:Rødbenet seriema

de:Seriemas es:Cariamidae fr:Cariamidae hu:Kígyászdarufélék nl:Seriema's ja:ノガンモドキ科 (Sibley) pt:Seriema fi:Töyhtökäärmekurki sv:Seriemor

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