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Crested Screamer
(Chauna torquata)
Classification
and Range
Crested
screamers are part of order Anseriformes, in the family
Anhimidae (screamers). There are three species of screamers
in the two genera of this family: Anhima and Chauna.
In Anhima, the single species is the horned screamer
(A. cornuta). In Chauna, the other two species are northern
screamer (C. chavaria) and the crested or southern screamer
(C. torquata). Crested screamers live in the southern
part of South America, in the countries of Peru, Bolivia,
Paraguay, north and eastern Argentina, southern Brazil
and Uruguay.
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Habitat
Freshwater locales,
such as tropical and sub-tropical wetlands, including lakes,
marshes, flooded grasslands and lagoons.
Physical
Characteristics
The crested screamer is a large gray bird with occasional black and brown feathers.
Certain individuals may have a green-black coloration. The body shape and size
of crested screamers resemble that of a goose or turkey. Their head is small,
covered with downy feathers and features a short, conical, hooked beak. A pair
of rings encircles their neck, one is bare white skin, and the other is black
feathers. They may also have white feathers on their head, neck or forewings.
Ornamental feathers grow in tufts on the back of the head and also form a slim
tuft on the forehead.
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Range Map
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Juvenile plumage is usually duller in comparison
to adults. Red skin surrounds their yellow or orange eyes. Large
feet with slender toes support their long, thick and strong legs.
Their feet have only vestigial and barely noticeable webbing at
the base of the toes. However, the toes are long and help support
these birds as they walk across dense mats of floating vegetation
or wade on soft, muddy bottoms of swamp areas.
Male
and female coloration is identical, as these birds are not
sexually dimorphic. Both adult
sexes have two large, bony spurs
on the inner side of each wing. Each spur is up to 2 inches
(5 cm) in length. Male crested screamers that are not paired
off use
these spurs to fight for females, while both sexes use them
to protect their territory from predators or disputes with
other screamer
pairs. An easy way to distinguish juveniles from adults is
the fact that the spurs on juveniles are shorter.
Body
length varies, between 28 – 37 inches (71 – 94
cm). For adults, the wingspan is approximately 69 inches (170
cm) in length.
Females
may be slightly smaller in weight and height compared to males.Body
weight varies greatly,
between 4 – 11 pounds
(1.8 – 5
kg).
Life
Span
In the wild, estimated to be 15 years. In zoos, they can live up to 35 years.
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Diet
In the wild: unlike some species of waterfowl, they do not filter their food.
Instead, they eat a variety of vegetation, such as the grasses, stems,
seeds, berries and leaves of several different kinds of plants. They
also occasionally eat insects and small animals.
At the
zoo: waterfowl pellets, romaine lettuce and an occasional apple.
Reproduction
Crested screamers establish monogamous relationships that last several years
in a row or possibly for the pair’s entire lifetime. Some populations
breed any time throughout the year, but others breed only in springtime
(October – December). Before breeding, courtship involves the pair
engaging in loud, continual duets and mutual preening of each other. Courtship
also involves un-paired males competing with rivals, as they kick and strike
with their sharp beak and robust wings.
When
the pair is ready to make a nest, they create a huge platform of
reeds, sticks, straws and other aquatic
plants on the ground near a source of shallow
water. Together, the pair tries to build the nest in an area that is inaccessible
to most predators and they vigorously defend this territory. The pair may
use the same nest or nest area year after year. The pair mates
on land, with the
male holding the back of the female’s neck with his bill.
At
two day intervals, the female lays two to seven white or beige
eggs in the nest.
The incubation period lasts 40 – 46 days, with the male and female
taking turns. At birth, the chicks are precocial and are covered in gray-yellow
down feathers. After hatching, the chicks leave the nest and begin to eat
on their own. For the next few weeks, the chicks remain close to the nest
as their
parents watch over, feed or point out food items to them. The chicks fledge
after 8 – 10 weeks of parental care and are fully independent at just
12 – 14 weeks of age. Juveniles join non-breeding birds or form their
own groups before forming pair bonds in the next breeding season.
Life
Cycle
Although these birds easily swim through the water, they prefer
to move on the ground. Unlike many other species in Anseriformes, they do
not dive for their food. They are non-migratory birds but are also excellent
flyers. When not breeding, they gather in large flocks numbering hundreds
of birds to search for food. During the winter, the flock lives a semi-nomadic
lifestyle, grazing together in open grasslands and moving as water conditions
change. Other times, the flock circles the skies in a large group. This behavior
usually involves calling loudly to each other, as they spiral until they
are almost out of view.
These
birds are more than capable of defending themselves from most predators.
Their noisy call discourages all but the most determined
hunters. However,
some predators such as foxes, wild cats or hunting dogs will hunt screamers.
When encountering large predators, screamers escape by flying to the treetops
and wait until it is safe to return to ground.
Life
in a Marsh
In addition to their deafening and non-melodic call, all species of screamer
birds have unique adaptations to survive in a variety of environments. First,
they have a layer of insulating air cells separating the outer skin from the
body. Unlike most birds they do not possess feather tracks. Their feathers
grow evenly all over their entire body without any bare spaces in between.
Even though they are large birds, their relatively low body weight helps them
navigate their aquatic surroundings. Screamers have a low body weight relative
to size due to the fact that they possess more extensive hollow spaces in their
bones compared to other birds. Additionally, screamers lack an uncinate process,
which is an extension of bone on each rib that projects towards the tail of
the animal. Via these extensions, ligaments join the ribs together and this
uncinate process strengthens the rib cage. The uncinate process is present
in almost all species of birds. Interestingly, screamers are the only living
species of bird lacking an uncinate process; the only other species that lack
this are the extinct and ancient species of Archaeopteryx. Lastly, their tongue
has many rough bumps on it to help the screamer grab and swallow tough plants.
Location
at the Zoo
Crested screamers are on exhibit in the Temperate Forest. They are in their
own exhibit with the Chiloe wigeons, next to the Chilean flamingos and Coscoroba
swans. The Temperate Forest also includes the Family Farm, Bug World, Wetlands
and Asian cranes. Other birds on exhibit in the Temperate Forest include: various
pheasant species, curassows and trumpeters from South America, and several
softbills (jays, laughing thrushes, turacos, whistling thrushes, birds of paradise
and mynahs).
Conservation
Connection
Crested screamers are the most common of the three screamer species and are
not endangered. However, at least 27 other species of waterfowl in Anseriformes
are either vulnerable, endangered or critically endangered. Crested screamers
have a large range within South America, as their stable populations cover
at least 1.35 million square miles (3.5 million km2). Crested screamers also
have a minimum population of at least 100,000 with up to as many as 1,000,000.
Although
native peoples sometimes hunt crested screamers in the wild, this practice
does not currently threaten these birds. Hunters or predators may
take their eggs, but as sentinels, these birds often startle or warn other
members of the flock. The biggest threats to crested screamers (and many
other species of waterfowl) are loss of habitat and other human–caused activities.
These activities include drainage of wetlands for agriculture, logging, pollution
and construction of roads. Fortunately, some screamers can adapt to these impacts
by foraging in and eventually colonizing cultivated fields. In turn, local
peoples consider them pests as they raid crops and compete for food or other
resources with domesticated species of birds.
How
You Can Help!
The effort to save endangered species requires cooperation and support at the
international, national, regional and individual levels. You can help in this
cause. Join and become active in Woodland Park Zoo and other conservation organizations
of your choice. Please do not buy products made from wild animal parts. Contact
your elected representatives and express your views about conservation of endangered
species and wild habitats.
Contact
the Woodland Park Zoo at webkeeper@zoo.org to
find out how you can support conservation
efforts at the zoo. Learn other ways you can
help conserve wildlife and the habitats they require
for survival
by visiting
our How You Can Help page.
Sources
and Suggested Reading
Campbell, Bruce and Elizabeth Lack, editors. 1985. A Dictionary of Birds. Published
for the British Ornithologists' Union by Buteo Books, Vermillion, SD. 670 p.
The
Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed. 2001 – 07. screamer. New York: Columbia
University Press. Accessed March 1, 2008 at www.bartleby.com/65/.
del
Hoyo, Josep et al. 1992. Handbook of the Birds of the World, Volume 1:
Ostrich
to Ducks. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona, Spain. 696 p.
InfoNatura:
Animals and Ecosystems of Latin America. 2007. NatureServe. Accessed
March 1, 2008
at http://www.natureserve.org/infonatura.
Integrated
Taxonomic Information System: Chauna torquata. 2008. Accessed March 1,
2008 at http://www.itis.gov.
The
Sacramento Zoo Species Fact Sheet: Southern Crested Screamer. Accessed
March 1, 2008 at
http://www.saczoo.com.
Sibley,
Charles G., and Burt L. Monroe. 1991. Distribution and Taxonomy of
Birds of the World. Yale University Press, New Haven,
CT. 11,360
p.
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