- Seriema
Taxobox
name = Seriemas
image_caption = "Cariama cristata"
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo =Gruiformes
familia = Cariamidae
familia_authority = Bonaparte, 1853
subdivision_ranks = Genera and species
subdivision = "Cariama cristata "
"Chunga burmeisteri "The Seriemas are a small and ancient family (Cariamidae) of tropical
South America nbird s related to the rails andbustard s.There are two species.
*
Red-legged Seriema , or Crested Cariama, " Cariama cristata". This is found from easternBrazil , to centralArgentina . It is bigger and nests on the ground or.
*Black-legged Seriema , " Chunga burmeisteri". This is found in northwest Argentina andParaguay . It nests in a tree.Description
Both species are around 80 cm long; the Red-legged Seriema is slightly bigger than the Black-legged. They forage on foot and run from danger rather than fly (though they can fly for short distances, and they roost in trees). 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 country, the Red-legged Seriema preferring grasslands and the Black-legged Seriema preferring scrub and open woodland.
They give loud, yelping calls and are often heard before they are seen.
Feeding
Ecologically they are the South American counterpart of the
Secretary Bird . They feed on insects, snakes, lizards, frogs, young birds, and rodents, with small amounts of plant food (including maize and beans). They often associate with grazing livestock, probably to take insects the animals disturb. When seriemas catch small reptiles, they beat the prey on the ground (Redford and Peters 1986) or throw it at a hard surface to extinguish life and also to break the bones. If the prey is too large to swallow whole, it will be ripped into smaller pieces with a sickle claw remniscent of those in Deinonychosaurs likeVelociraptor , andTroodon . (pictured below) by holding the prey in the beak and tearing it apart with the claw.Reproduction
Seriemas build bulky stick nests. They lay two (or three) white or buff eggs sparsely spotted with brown and purple. The female does most of the incubation, which last from 24 to 30 days. Hatchlings are downy but stay in the nest for about two weeks; then they jump down and follow both parents. They reach full maturity at the age of four to five months.
Relationship with humans
People sometimes capture young seriemas and tame them, keeping them with poultry to warn off predators.
Prehistoric relatives
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 phorusrhacids, which are known from
fossil s from South and North America.cite web
last = Naish
first = Darren
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = Terror birds
work = Darren Naish: Tetrapod Zoology
publisher =
date = 2006-10-27
url = http://darrennaish.blogspot.com/2006/10/terror-birds.html
format =
doi =
accessdate = 2008-03-29] cite journal
last = Alvarenga
first = H. M. F.
authorlink =
coauthors = Höfling, E.
title = Systematic Revision of the Phorusrhacidae (Aves: Ralliformes)
journal = Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia
volume = 43
issue = 4
pages = 55–91
publisher = [http://www.usp.br/mz/ Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo]
location =São Paulo
date = 2003
url = http://www.scielo.br/pdf/paz/v43n4/17491.pdf
doi =
id = ISSN 0031-1049
accessdate = 2008-03-29] Several other related groups, such as theidiornithids andbathornithids were part ofPalaeogene faunas inNorth America andEurope 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. Some of the fossils from theEocene fauna of theMessel Pit (i.e. "Salimia " and "Idiornis ") of has also been suggested as serimas [Morlo, M & al. (2004): An annotated taxonomic list of the Middle Eocene (MP 11) Vertebrata of Messel. "Courier Forschingsinstitut Senckenberg" 252, pp 95-108. [http://www.senckenberg.de/files/content/forschung/abteilung/terrzool/ornithologie/morlo_et_al.pdf] ] , though their status remain inconclusive.The seriemas have an extensible second claw that is raised from the ground. Although this resembles the "sickle claw" of "
Velociraptor " and its relatives, it is probably not used in the same way.Etymology
Names for these birds in the
Tupian languages are "siriema", "sariama", "çariama", which are explained as meaning "crested" ("New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary").References
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Pictures
External links
* [http://ibc.hbw.com/ibc/phtml/familia.phtml?idFamilia=50 Seriema videos] on the Internet Bird Collection
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.