- Anas chlorotis
Identification
48cm tall and weigh just over half a kilo as an adult. The male is slightly larger than the female. Brown teal have a warm brown plumage, with dark-brown mottling on the breast.
Breeding males have a glossy green head, a narrow white collar, broad green and narrow white bands on the wings and a white flank patch. A distinctive feature of all Brown Teal is their blue-black bill and the narrow white ring around the eye. Their eyes are brown.
Distribution
New Zealand. The population was reduced to approximately 1300 birds (1999), most of them found on Great Barrier Island. A few birds can be found on Kapiti, Mana, and Tiritiri Matangi Islands; the eastern side of Northland and a new population has been established in the Coromandel area. Brown teal are regularly present at the Waikanae Estuary, probably part of the Kapiti Island population. In the South Island, a few birds survive in Fiordland.
Taxonomy
The Brown Teal is one of 3 closely related species of Teal in New Zealand, the other two being the Flightless Teal, and Campbell Island Teal.
Per Clements V6.3.2 and IOC V2.0 the Brown Teal's binomial name is Anas chlorotis.
Habitat
Stream and bushland habitats, shallow wetlands, estuaries, and wet forest habitats.
Status
Listed as endangered. The populations has been dramatically reduced by habitat destruction, hunting pressure and introduced mammals. The remaining populations are now carefully managed and are increasing now.1
Behaviour
They are reluctant flyers and are shallow divers, dabbling just below the surface for food.
Diet
Their favourite food is invertebrates and they mainly feed in the evening or at night.
Breeding
Most brown teal breed from June to October but are able to breed at almost any time of the year. They begin breeding at about 2 years of age and can lay clutches of up to 8 eggs. Brown Teal build a bowl-shaped nest near water, under the cover of dense tussocks or ferns, constructed with grasses lined with down. The female incubates the eggs about 30 days while the drake guards the nest - they are strongly territorial during breeding. Chicks fledge at an age of about 2 months.
Vocalisation
Males give a soft whistle, and the female a low quack and growl.