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  2. Fuegian steamer duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuegian_steamer_duck

    The Fuegian steamer duck (Tachyeres pteneres) or the Magellanic flightless steamer duck, is a flightless duck native to South America. It belongs to the steamer duck genus Tachyeres . It inhabits the rocky coasts and coastal islands from southern Chile and Chiloé to Tierra del Fuego , switching to the adjacent sheltered bays and lakes further ...

  3. Steamer duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steamer_duck

    The steamer ducks are a genus (Tachyeres) of ducks in the family Anatidae. All of the four species occur at the southern cone of South America in Chile and Argentina, and all except the flying steamer duck are flightless ; even this one species capable of flight rarely takes to the air.

  4. Falkland steamer duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falkland_Steamer_Duck

    The Falkland steamer duck (Tachyeres brachypterus) is a species of flightless duck found on the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic Ocean. The steamer ducks get their name from their unconventional swimming behaviour in which they flap their wings and feet on the water in a motion reminiscent of an old paddle steamer. [ 3 ]

  5. Flying steamer duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_steamer_duck

    Flying steamer ducks inhabit aquatic areas at the southern tip of South America, specifically Chile and Argentina, Tierra del Fuego, and the Falkland Islands. [7] Genetic comparisons of Falkland Island steamer ducks suggest the species diverged from continental steamer duck species between 2.2 and 2.6 million years ago, coinciding with a proposed land bridge that may have once connected the ...

  6. Chubut steamer duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chubut_steamer_duck

    Due to the Chubut Steamer ducks being flightless, they need to have different methods of escaping predators besides flying. [4] To do this they can swim, dive or steam. Steaming is a faster unique way to swim for these flightless birds. When they steam they use their wings as oars and their feet to generate turbulence. [4]

  7. Gastornis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastornis

    Gastornis is an extinct genus of large, flightless birds that lived during the mid-Paleocene to mid-Eocene epochs of the Paleogene period. Most fossils have been found in Europe, and some species typically referred to the genus are known from North America and Asia.

  8. List of birds of Argentina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_birds_of_Argentina

    The rufous hornero is the national bird of Argentina.. This is a list of the bird species recorded in Argentina.The avifauna of Argentina has 1044 confirmed species, of which 18 are endemic, nine have been introduced by humans, 69 are rare or vagrants, two are thought to be extinct, and four and possibly a fifth have been extirpated.

  9. Bermuda flightless duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bermuda_flightless_duck

    The Bermuda flightless duck (Anas pachyscelus) is an extinct species of flightless duck which was endemic to the island of Bermuda in the North Atlantic Ocean.It was described in 1960 by Alexander Wetmore, from Late Pleistocene subfossil remains collected in 1956 by Bermudan ornithologist David Wingate, at the Wilkinson Quarry in Hamilton Parish. [1]