Mallard |
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Description
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18-27" Male has a green head,white neck ring, chestnut breast, and grayish body. Speculum metallic purplish blue, bordered in front and back with white. Female mottled brown with white tail and purplish blue speculum; bill mottled orange and black. |
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Voice
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Males utter soft,reedy motes;
females,a loud quack.
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Habitat
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Lakes,ponds,rivers,and marshes.semi-domesticated
birds may be found on any body of water.
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Nesting
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8-10 pale greenish-buff eggs in a shallow bowl of grass
lined with down, hidden in marsh grass or on a brush pile near shore.
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Other
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The Mallard is ndoubtedly
the most abundant duck in the world. Nearly 10 million live in North America,
and millions more are found in Eurasia. Since the Mallard is the ancestor
of the common white
domestic duck, still more can be added to the total. Mallards frequently
interbreed with domestic stock, producing a bewildering variety of patterns
and colors. They also hybridize with wild species such as the closely
related American Black Duck and even occasionally with Northern Pintails.
Strong fliers, Mallards sometimes reach remote oceanic islands where isolated
populations have evolved into new species. Like the Mottled Duck, these
isolated populations often differ from the Mallard mainly in that they
lack the colorful plumage of the male.
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