Screamer
The screamers are three South American bird species placed in family Anhimidae. They were thought to be related to the Galliformes because of similar bills, but are more closely related to the family Anatidae, i.e. ducks and allies, and the magpie goose, within the clade Anseriformes. The clade is exceptional within the living birds in lacking uncinate processes of ribs. The three species are: The horned screamer ; the southern screamer or crested screamer ; and the northern screamer or black-necked screamer.
Systematics and evolution
Anhimids are most similar to presbyornithids, with which they may form a clade to the exclusion of the rest of Anseriformes. Given the presence of lamelae in the otherwise fowl-like beaks of screamers, it is even possible that they evolved from presbyornithid-grade birds, reverting from a filter-feeding lifestyle to an herbivorous one.Screamers have a poor fossil record. Anachronornis from the Eocene of Wyoming was originally suggested to be a screamer but is now though to be a basal anseriform, while the more modern Chaunoides antiquus is known from the late Oligocene to early Miocene in Brazil. Eoneornis from the Miocene of Argentina was originally described as an indeterminate anseriform but shows some similarities with Anhimidae, especially Chaunoides.
| Image | Genus | Living species |
| Anhima |
| |
| Chauna |