Mallard | Anatomy, Migration & Diet (2024)

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Also known as: Anas platyrhynchos, wild duck, wild mallard

Written by

Sy Montgomery Natural history writer. Author of Journey of the Pink Dolhpins: An Amazon Quest and Spell of the Tiger in addition to other books and articles.

Sy Montgomery

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mallard

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Related Topics:
Laysan teal
Greenland mallard
common mallard
Anas

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mallard, (Anas platyrhynchos), abundant “wild duck” of the Northern Hemisphere that is the ancestor of most domestic ducks. Breeding throughout Europe, most of Asia, and northern North America, mallards winter as far south as North Africa, India, and southern Mexico. During the 20th century, mallards expanded their range eastward through southern Canada.

The mallard is a typical dabbling duck, feeding on plants as well as on small animals in the shallows of ponds, marshes, lakes, and rivers. The male (drake) is easily recognized by its iridescent green head, which is separated from the chestnut breast by a white ring around the neck; the body is white, light gray, and black. The female (hen) is a mottled dull and yellowish brown. Both sexes have a yellow bill and a purplish blue bar on the wing mark bordered front and rear with white. Only the females quack. Males can only whistle and utter drawn-out nasal disturbance calls and similar aggressive calls directed at other males.

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During courtship, three or more males may display simultaneously, shaking heads and tails, performing intricate bill dipping and bobbing movements, and whistling. Mating is preceded by the pair facing each other and repeatedly jerking their heads downward, a display called pumping. The drake also has an elaborate display to announce a successful mating. Immediately after copulation, he flings his head up and back and whistles. Then he swims around the female in a gesture called nod-swimming while she bathes. After mating, drakes lose their flight feathers, becoming flightless for several weeks.

The pair selects a nest site, most often in early evening, with the female always in the lead. It may be located in fields, in tall grass, or on muskrat lodges. They may take a week or more to select a site. The female constructs the nest from leaves, reeds, and grasses. During incubation, down from the female’s breast is added.

The five to ten or more eggs in the clutch all hatch within two hours, though they are laid over a two-week period. The chicks themselves synchronize their hatching, signaling one another by clicks from within the shell.

Mallards, like all ducks, geese, and swans, belong to the family Anatidae of the order Anseriformes. The black duck (A. rubripes) of Canada was once considered a subspecies of mallard. Mallards will mate with them—in fact, black duck females prefer mallard males. But most authorities now consider the black duck a separate species. Conversely, the Laysan teal (formerly A. platyrhynchos laysanensis), of which only a small population survives on Laysan Island west of Hawaii, is now classified as a separate species, although it was once classed as a mallard and looks very similar to a small mallard hen. Of the other races or subspecies, only one, the Greenland mallard (A. platyrhynchos conboschas), shows the strong sexual difference in plumage; all others (both sexes) resemble the hen of A. platyrhynchos platyrhynchos.

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Sy Montgomery

Mallard | Anatomy, Migration & Diet (2024)

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