GRUIFORMES of South America

The order Gruiformes contains a considerable number of living and extinct bird families with little in common. In fact, birds have been placed in this order just because it was not clear where else to put them! The rails, cranes, and limpkin are related and are considered part of the true Guiformes. However, the Bustards are unrelated to these true Guiformes.



Coots, Moorhens, Rails

Order Gruiformes    Family Rallidae

The coots, moorhens, crakes, and rails of the Railidae family generally occupy dense vegetation in damp environments near lakes, swamps, or rivers. They are omnivores. Most nest in dense vegetation. Most species walk and run vigorously on strong legs, and have long toes which are well adapted to soft, uneven surfaces. A few coots and gallinules have a "frontal shield", which is a fleshy rearward extension of the upper bill. The flight of those Rallidae able to fly, while not very powerful, can be sustained for long periods of time and many species undertake annual migrations. [abstracted from Wikipedia]


Genus Fulica

Coot, American
  Fulica americana   Found: The Americas
Photographed by: 1)  Mike Baird - Cloisters City
    2) Alan D Wilson - Oregon   3, 4, 5) Dick Daniels - North Carolina



Coot, Red-fronted   Fulica rufifrons  Found: South America
Photographed by:  Claudio Timm in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil 


Coot, Red-gartered  Fulica armillata  Found: South America
Photographed by: Lip Kee Yap - Argentina


Coot, White-winged  Fulica leucoptera  Found: southern South America
Photographed by: 1) Dario Niz in Uruguay 2) Shanthanu Bhardwaj - Buenos Aires, Argentina 
   3, 4) Claudio Timm in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil



Genus Gallinula

Gallinule, Spot-flanked  Gallinula melanops  Found: South America
Photographed by: 1) Cláudio Timm - Brazil    2) Joshua Stone - the National Botanical Gardens - Vina del Mar, Chile
2) Juvenile


Moorhen, Common Gallinula chloropus   Found: The Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa
Photographed by: 1) Dick Daniels - North Carolina  2) Dick - England    3, 6) Dick - the Galapagos 
    5, 8) Dick - Birds of Eden, South Africa  4) Sandy Cole - Birds of Eden  7) Dick - Jamaica
8) Juvenile identified by Charlie Westeinen
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Genus Porphyrio

Gallinule, Purple aka American Purple Gallinule  Porphyrula martinica   Found: The Americas
Photographed by: 1) Dick Daniels - World of Birds, an aviary in South Africa




Genus Aramides

Rail, Giant Wood  Aramides ypecaha  Found: South America
Photographed by: 1, 2) Dick Daniels - World of Birds, South Africa  3) Sandy Cole - World of Birds 
    4) Cludio Timm  - Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil


Rail, Slaty-breasted Wood  Aramides saracura   Found: South America
Photographed by: 1) Adrian198cm- Curitiba, Brazil  2, 3) Dario Sanches - Brazil



Genus Pardirallus

Rail, Plumbeous  Pardirallus sanguinolentus  Found: South America
Photographed by:  1, 2, 3) Cláudio Timm - Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil


Genus Porzana

Sora Porzana carolina   Found: The Americas
Photographed by: 1)) Elaine R Wilson - the Birding Center, Port Aransas, Texas  2) Mike Baird
   3) Charlie Westerinen - Malheur National Widelife Reserve in Oregon
3) Juvenile



Genus Rallus

Rail, Clapper  Rallus longirostris   Found: The Americas
Photographed by:  1)  Len Blumin   2) Alan D Wilson - Laguna Madre Nature Trail, South Padre Island    
    3) Dick Daniels - North Carolinad, Texas




Order Gruiformes   Family Eurypygidae - 1 genus

The Eurypygidae family only contains one species, the Sunbittern.  It as been placed in the Gruiformes order because of its similarity to rails, but this similarity is probably due to convergent evolution.

Genus Eurypyga - 1 species

Sunbittern  Eurypyga helias  Found: tropical Americas
Photographed by:  1, 2, 3) Dick Daniels - North Carolina Zoo  4) Sandy Cole - North Carolina Zoo
    5, 6) Dick - Tampa's Lowry Park Zoo    7)  Cláudio Timm - the Amazon, Brazil







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