Chunga burmeisteri (Hartlaub, 1860) is a animal in the Cariamidae family, order Cariamiformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Chunga burmeisteri (Hartlaub, 1860) (Chunga burmeisteri (Hartlaub, 1860))
🦋 Animalia

Chunga burmeisteri (Hartlaub, 1860)

Chunga burmeisteri (Hartlaub, 1860)

Chunga burmeisteri, the black-legged seriema, is a large Neotropical ground bird found in dry open habitats of central South America.

Family
Genus
Chunga
Order
Cariamiformes
Class
Aves

About Chunga burmeisteri (Hartlaub, 1860)

The black-legged seriema, scientifically named Chunga burmeisteri (Hartlaub, 1860), is a large bird. It measures 70–85 cm (28–33 in) in length and weighs roughly 1.2 kg (2.6 lb), making it one of the largest ground-dwelling birds in the Neotropics; only the red-legged seriema and rheas are larger. It has a long neck, long tail, very long slender legs, and short rounded wings. Its overall body color is ash-grey, but close inspection reveals the grey body feathers are finely vermiculated with black and white. It has an inconspicuous frontal crest made of erect, hairlike bristles, and a second inconspicuous crest formed by particularly long feathers on its nape. It has whitish supercilia and lores, and the feathers on its crown and nape are barred black and white. Its belly is paler grey, while its lower abdomen, crissum and thighs are yellowish-white. The flight feathers on its wings are heavily barred black and white, and its grey tail is barred with a narrow black tip. Its feathers are loosely webbed, which gives the bird a soft overall appearance. Its stout black bill has a strongly decurved culmen and a small hook at the tip. The iris is reddish-brown, and the legs are dark-grey to black. Its feet have three short front toes with very sharp claws, and one small elevated hind toe, a feature also found in Dromaeosauridae. Male and female black-legged seriemas look identical to one another. Juveniles are similar to adults, but have more patterning: their heads, necks and breasts are barred, and their backs and upperwing coverts are speckled with white. The black-legged seriema is found from southeastern Bolivia and northern Paraguay south into north-central Argentina. It is a dry-country bird that inhabits savanna, shrubland and dry open forest, including the Dry Chaco and the Monte Desert. The species was not documented in Bolivia until the late 1970s. It generally occurs at elevations below 800 m (2,600 ft), which is lower than the typical elevation range of the red-legged seriema. While it will forage in untreed areas such as cultivated fields and grassy plains, it only does so when wooded areas are nearby. Black-legged seriemas are omnivorous. Insects, especially beetles and locusts, make up a large part of their diet, and they occasionally prey on rodents. They also consume plant material, including leaves, grass and seeds. They often hunt near the feet of livestock, which are presumed to flush insects out as they move.

Photo: (c) Guillermo Menéndez, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC) · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Cariamiformes Cariamidae Chunga

More from Cariamidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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