|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
Wood Duck
Wood Duck, male, breeding plumage
About the photographs
Wood Duck, female, Iroquois NWR NY
Wood Duck, male, non-breeding plumage
Menu
A colorful duck of wooded swamps and streamsides, the Wood Duck is one of only a few North American ducks that nest in trees. Many people consider it to be the most beautiful of all waterfowl. Cool Facts
Description
Sex DifferencesMale brightly patterned, female dull gray brown. MaleBreeding (Alternate) Plumage: Head iridescent green and purple. Long crest green, purple. Thin white line extending from bill, over the eye, to the back of the crest. Throat white with two finger-like projections onto face and neck. Bill red, with thin yellow at base and dark tip. Eyes red. Chest deep reddish. White stripe extending up side of chest; black bar behind it. Sides yellowish gold, bordered in black and surrounded by white line. Back black with metallic sheen. Undertail reddish violet. Tail black with bronzy sheen. Belly white. FemaleBushy crest on head. Head and cheek gray with bronze and purple sheen. White area around eye, tapers to rear. Chin and throat white. Upperparts olive or gray with metallic sheen. Breast gray-brown with tan streaks. Belly and under tail white. Sides brown. Tail dark. Bill dark with thin white line at base. ImmatureSimilar to adult female. Upperparts brownish gray. Cheek light gray. White circle around eye. Throat white, with projections onto face and neck in males. Crown dark. Dark stripe extending back from eye. Similar Species
SoundFemale makes loud "oo-eek, oo-eek" when disturbed and taking flight. Male has thin, rising and falling zeeting whistle. »listen to songs of this speciesRangeSummer RangeBreeds from southern Canada, throughout the eastern half of the United States, southward to Cuba. In the West, breeds from British Columbia southward along Pacific Coast to southern California, and at scattered locations inland. Winter RangeWinters in southern three-quarters of breeding range, and in Southwest. HabitatFound in forested wetlands, including along rivers, swamps, marshes, ponds, and lakes. FoodSeeds, acorns, fruits, aquatic and terrestrial invertebrates. BehaviorForagingMoves rapidly and pecks and dabbles on water surface. May tip-up or dive for submerged food items. ReproductionNest TypeNest in preformed cavities in trees or nest boxes. Lined with down from female's breast. Egg DescriptionGlossy creamy white to tan. Clutch SizeUsually 6-15 eggs. Range: 6-40.Condition at HatchingHatch covered in down and able to leave the nest soon after. Conservation StatusDeclined dramatically in late 19th century, but recovered in 20th. Current populations stable or increasing. Other NamesCanard branchu (French) Sources used to construct this page:Hepp, G. R., and F. C. Bellrose. 1995. Wood Duck (Aix sponsa). In The Birds of North America, No. 169 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and The American Ornithologists' Union, Washington, D.C. |
|||||||||||||