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Pair
Wallmount Mallards.
See
detailed photos below.
Size:
15" long.
Price:
$150.00 US
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Description:
Perhaps
the most familiar duck North America, the Mallard is a
large and heavy bird. Males have gray bodies with chestnut-brown
breasts, white collars, iridescent-green heads, and yellow
bills. Females are mottled brown-and-black with lighter
brown heads and necks and yellow bills mottled with black.
They have a black stripe running horizontally through the
eye. Both sexes have orange feet and a blue speculum, or
wing-patch, bordered in white on two sides, best seen in
flight. From June to September, immatures and males, which
are then in non-breeding (eclipse) plumage, look much like
females.
Habitat:
Shallow
marshes are the preferred habitat, although Mallards are
found virtually everywhere there is open water, from city
parks to subalpine lakes. Although they favor fresh water,
they are also often found in sheltered bays and estuaries
along the coast.
Behavior:
Mallards
forage by up-ending in shallow water and by grazing on
land. Mallard pairs form in the fall and winter, and remain
intact through the winter and into spring. Pair bonds tend
to break up, however, when the female begins incubating
eggs.
Diet:
Mallards
are omnivorous, eating seeds, stems, and roots from a variety
of aquatic plants, especially sedges, grasses, pondweeds,
and smartweeds. Insect larvae and other aquatic invertebrates
are also part of the diet, especially the diet of young
birds. In many places, humans provide Mallards with food
year round.
Nesting:
The
female usually picks a nest site that is close to water,
but may be over a mile away. Typically situated on the
ground under dense vegetation, the nest is sometimes on
a stump, platform, or even up to 10 feet off the ground
in a tree. It is usually a shallow bowl of plant matter,
lined with down. The female typically lays 7 to 10 eggs,
which she incubates for 26 to 30 days. Within a day of
hatching, the young leave the nest. The female leads the
young to the water and continues to tend them, and they
feed themselves. The young first fly at 52 to 60 days.
Migration
Status:
Mallards
will remain as far north in winter as conditions permit,
and many populations that are fed by people do not migrate.
Those that do migrate do so early in spring. Most birds
are heading from wintering grounds to breeding areas in
February and March. The fall migration is more drawn out.
Males leave their mates when incubation begins (as early
as mid-March) and gather in large wetlands where they molt
into their non-breeding or eclipse plumage and go through
a flightless period. The actual migration movement begins
in late August and lasts through December, with peak movements
in October and November.
Conservation
Status:
Although
numbers fluctuate considerably and are probably reduced
from historical levels, the Mallard is still one of the
most abundant ducks in the world. It is a generalist and
has adapted to living in close association with humans.
Numbers have increased historically in eastern North America.
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