• Welcome to BirdForum, the internet's largest birding community with thousands of members from all over the world. The forums are dedicated to wild birds, birding, binoculars and equipment and all that goes with it.

    Please register for an account to take part in the discussions in the forum, post your pictures in the gallery and more.
Where premium quality meets exceptional value. ZEISS Conquest HDX.

Unknown Duck - Hill Country Texas, USA (1 Viewer)

Gordon W

Well-known member
Once again I've photographed a bird that's probably in my field guide but I'm just not finding it. This time a duck. In addition to what's shown in the photo, it had bright orange legs.
 

Attachments

  • Unknown Duck_44930.jpg
    Unknown Duck_44930.jpg
    135 KB · Views: 97
Some sort of escaped, farmyard type, hybridised duck, 'muckyduck'. You won't find it in a field guide, it's not a wild bird, and probably a mixture of a few sp's!
 
A hybrid is a cross between two species. Since both parents of this bird have Mallard as a wild ancestor they are the same species and this is not a hybrid.

Graham
 
It's a wild-type Mallard x domestic Mallard cross. Not a hybrid (only one species involved) but a mixture of 2 or more breeds (like a mongrel dog or a dog x wolf or coyote cross).
 
Last edited:
It's a wild-type Mallard x domestic Mallard cross. Not a hybrid (only one species involved) but a mixture of 2 or more breeds (like a mongrel dog or a dog x wolf or coyote cross).

Agree with mallard (wild) x mallard (domestic) = one species = no hybrid; but, wolves, coyotes, and dogs are three different species. In fact NA has two species of wolves (red and grey). The mongrel dog analogy works though.
Just splitting hairs.

Scott
 
Agree with mallard (wild) x mallard (domestic) = one species = no hybrid; but, wolves, coyotes, and dogs are three different species. In fact NA has two species of wolves (red and grey). The mongrel dog analogy works though.
Just splitting hairs.

Scott

Of course that all depends on which taxonomy you follow. Although coyote and wolf are different there are plenty of ppl that would lump red/grey wolf and dog.
 
Agree with mallard (wild) x mallard (domestic) = one species = no hybrid; but, wolves, coyotes, and dogs are three different species. In fact NA has two species of wolves (red and grey). The mongrel dog analogy works though.
Just splitting hairs.

Scott

Right, fair enough--coyotes definitely comprise a separate species from dogs & wolves & should be left out of the equation. But, to split hairs in my turn, the gray wolf (Canis lupus) is ancestral to the dog & the relationship of the 2 is an exact analogy to the wild mallard/domestic mallard relationship. Red wolves are another fairly recent offshoot of the same ancestral stock & whether they should be considered separate species from gray wolves (& dogs) is controversial. As far as I know all 4 clades--coyotes, dogs, the 2 wolves--are completely inter-fertile, as are the offspring of any & all crosses between them.
 
Last edited:
....But, to split hairs in my turn, the gray wolf (Canis lupus) is ancestral to the dog & the relationship of the 2 is an exact analogy to the wild mallard/domestic mallard relationship.

You are absolutely right. I had forgotten that dogs were Canis lupus familiaris, not just Canis familiaris.

Red wolves are another fairly recent offshoot of the same ancestral stock & whether they should be considered separate species from gray wolves (& dogs) is controversial. As far as I know all 4 clades--coyotes, dogs, the 2 wolves--are completely inter-fertile, as are the offspring of any & all crosses between them.

I'm not sure that part of the argument works, as then I don't think we would be able to use the term "hybrid" for any of the crosses between mallards, blacks, mexicans, mottled, etc.

It's rather a plastic notion the idea of species isn't it?

Scott

p.s. I see at least some dictionaries define hybrid as a cross between "breeds" as well as species and genera. So I guess technically yuckducks ARE hybrids, but I agree that in the traditional sense they are not.
 
p.s. I see at least some dictionaries define hybrid as a cross between "breeds" as well as species and genera. So I guess technically yuckducks ARE hybrids, but I agree that in the traditional sense they are not.

I think we're probably on the same page here. As you say, the terminology is not as cut-and-dried as it could be. Getting back to "yuck ducks", they're second I think only to Cooper's/Sharp-shinned Hawks in number of appearances on the Bird Identification Q&A forum The word "hybrid" is almost always introduced at some point in these postings &, as here, invariably ends up shot down on the grounds that inter-breed crosses are not "true" hybrids. One reason I think that the distinction is maintained so fiercely in these threads, is that true hybrids between full species are a lot more common among waterfowl than among other birds. And, of course, it gives pedants like myself something to do.
 
Warning! This thread is more than 16 years ago old.
It's likely that no further discussion is required, in which case we recommend starting a new thread. If however you feel your response is required you can still do so.

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top