Anseriformes
\nThe order
Anseriformes contains about 150
species of
bird in three families: the
Anhimidae (the screamers),
Anseranatidae (the
Magpie Goose), and the
Anatidae, which includes over 140 species of
waterfowl, among them the
ducks,
geese, and
swans.
All species in the order are highly adapted for an aquatic existence at the water surface. All are web-footed for efficient swimming (although some have subsequently become mainly terrestrial).
It is thought that the Anseriformes originated when two groups of specialised filter feeders diverged from the
Charadriiformes (plovers, gulls and allies) by evolving different mechanisims to filter small food particles from water. The
flamingos developed a filter structure in the lower part of the bill; the ancestors of the Anseriformes developed the characteristic bill structure that they still share. The combination of the internal shape of the bill and a modified tongue acts as a suction pump to draw water in at the tip of the bill and expel it from the sides and rear; an array of fine filter plates called
lamellae traps small particles, which are then licked off and swallowed.
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\nBird family tree
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All Anseriformes have this basic structure, but many have subsequently adopted alternative feeding strategies: geese graze on plants, the
saw-billed ducks catch fish; even the
screamers, which have bills that seem on first sight more like those of the game birds, still have vestigal lamellae.
The Anseriformes and the
Galliformes (pheasants etc) are ancestral to neognathous birds, and should follow
ratites and tinamous in bird classification systems.
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