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Blue-winged Teal - BirdForum Opus

Revision as of 19:37, 13 January 2009 by Deliatodd-18346 (talk | contribs) (User template. References given for copied text)
Photo by David Roach
Photographed at Wakodahatchee
Anas discors

Identification

L. 14-16" (36-41 cm)

  • Small brown duck
  • Pale blue shoulder patches.

Male

  • Gray head
  • White crescent in front of eye

Female

  • Mottled brown, similar to female Cinnamon Teal, but with obscure patterning on face
  • Grayer and larger billed than female Green-winged, with pale blue shoulder patches like male.

Distribution

Breeds from southeastern Alaska and western Canada to Canadian Maritimes and south to northeastern California, New Mexico, and New York. Winters from southern California, southern Texas, and the Carolinas southward through tropical America.

Taxonomy

There are 2 subspecies:

  • A d discors
  • A d orphna

Habitat

Marshes, shallow ponds, and lakes.

Behaviour

Fast and wary, Blue-winged Teal fly in small groups or flocks, turning in unison and flashing the blue area of the wing. They arrive latest of all ducks at their breeding grounds and leave early in the fall. On low, marshy prairies in the central part of the continent, where this duck is most numerous, virtually every pond and pothole has a breeding pair. The male commonly "stands guard" on the pond while the female is incubating.

Unlike other dabbling ducks that form pairs in the fall, this teal begins courting in the spring and often does not acquire the familiar breeding plumage until December or January.

Like most ducks, it goes through an eclipse plumage and molts most of its feathers simultaneously, including the primaries, and so is flightless until new feathers grow in.

Breeding

9-12 dull white eggs in a down-lined hollow concealed in grass near water.

Vocalisation

Soft lisping or peeping note. Female utters a soft quack.

References

  1. eNature

External Links

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