The
screamers are a small
clade of
birds (Anhimidae). For a long time, they were thought to be most closely related to the
Galliformes because of similar
bills, but they are instead more closely related to
ducks (family Anatidae), most closely to the
magpie goose (which some
DNA evidence suggests are closer to screamers than to ducks). The clade is exceptional within the living birds in lacking
uncinate processes of ribs. The screamers are represented by three species, the
horned screamer (
Anhima cornuta), the
southern screamer or crested screamer (
Chauna torquata) and the
northern screamer or black-necked screamer (
Chauna chavaria). A
penis is absent in the males, and the birds' skin has a layer about a quarter of an inch thick that is filled with small bubbles of air, which produce a crackling sound when pressed.