Ducks
· Family: Anatidae
· Order: Anseriformes
The family Anatidae comprises
between 146 and 160 species. The family is diverse, containing ducks geese and
swans.
Most anatids have long necks
and legs set back on the body for swimming. Male and female ducks often look
very different, with the males generally having colorful plumage, especially
during the breeding season. Many anatids embark on long migrations to and from
their breeding grounds.
The largest anatid is the
trumpeter swan. It is the heaviest North American bird, and has a wingspan of
around 3 m (10 ft.)
Mallard
Duck
Mallard ducks are the most common
and recognizable wild ducks in the Northern Hemisphere.
You'll find mallard
ducks near ponds, marshes, streams, and lakes, where they feed on plants, invertebrates, fish,
and insects.
Mallards are dabbling, or surface-feeding, ducks because they eat by tipping
underwater for food—head down, feet and tail in the air—rather than diving. Mallards
also forage and graze for food on land.
The male mallard duck, called a drake, sports a glossy green
head, a white ring around its neck and a rich, chestnut-brown breast. The
mottled brown female mallard looks downright dull next to the male's showy
feathers.
The mallard duck's outer feathers
are waterproof, thanks to oil that’s secreted from a gland near the tail.
Beneath this tightly packed waterproof layer of feathers lies a soft, warm
layer of feathers called down. Twice a year, mallards molt, or shed, their
flight feathers, temporarily grounding the birds for several weeks until the
feathers grow back.
Mallards fly in groups called
flocks. Like most migratory birds, mallards fly in the famous V formation.
During winter migration, mallards fly south in search of warm weather, often
resting at the same spots year after year. Migrating mallards can travel great
distances, relying on rivers, coasts, and valleys to find their way.
A female mallard lays up to a
dozen eggs in nests on the ground near water, often in a small depression or
tree hole. She lines the nest with warm down plucked from her undercoat. Soon
after birth, baby ducks, called ducklings,
open their eyes. A little more than a day after hatching, ducklings can run,
swim, and forage for food on their own. They stay in the nest for less than a
month. A group of ducklings is called a brood. Outside the nest, the brood
sticks close by the mother for safety, often following behind her in a neat,
single-file line.