Class:
Aves
Order:
Anseriformes
Scientific Name:
Mergus cucullatus
Range:
Alaska to Nova Scotia, British Columbia, the U.S.A. except southwestern states
Habitat:
Wooded habitats that contain clear-water streams or clear lakes.
Diet:
Wild: Fish, frogs, tadpoles, crustaceans, mollusks, snails
Zoo: Waterfowl diet, generic grain
Gestation:
32 to 33 days
Litter:
8 to 12, usually 10, glossy white eggs
Description:
The length is 16 to 19 inches. This duck’s small, thin bill and crested head give it a distinctive profile. Breeding males may have a glossy black head with a neat, rounded crest, and a prominent white head patch starting behind the eye. Rusty flanks are separated from a white breast by two vertical black bars and a black back. Females are dark with a grayish-brown head and a prominent rust-orange crest. The back is dull black, the flanks brownish-gray, and the chin and throat paler.
Behavior:Usually seen in pairs or small parties, these ducks are less sociable than most diving-ducks. Their flocks rarely exceed 15 birds. Pair formation begins in mid-winter. Mergansers feed by diving. They fly rapidly, low over the surface of the water, taking off with some spattering over the surface. They are very agile while flying through the trees. They are migratory, but often remain until force to move by freezing waters.
Reproduction:Females frequently reoccupy the nest site of the previous year if it is still available. They prefer to nest in tree cavities along secluded woodland ponds and streams. When incubation is underway the males desert the females to commence post-breeding molt. Females move their newly-hatched ducklings out of the nest within a day of hatching, and usually go to shallow waters close to timber. The fledging period is about 70 days. It is uncertain how long the female remains with her brood.
Did You Know?
• They are also known as the “Sawbill”, or “Fish-duck”.
• The Genus name, Mergus, is from the Latin mergo, “I dive, I plunge”. The species name, cucullatus, is from the Latin cucullus, “a hood” and atus, a suffix meaning “provided with.”
Where in the Zoo?
I can be found in the Tufted Deer Yard at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo.
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