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Difference between revisions of "Common Merganser" - BirdForum Opus

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*''M. m. americanus'' (Common Merganser).  
 
*''M. m. americanus'' (Common Merganser).  
 
::Breeds in [[North America]]. It has deeper base to bill and the male has dark bar across bases of median coverts.
 
::Breeds in [[North America]]. It has deeper base to bill and the male has dark bar across bases of median coverts.
::Some authors have suggested that ''M. m. americanus'' may be better treated as a separate species, but this has not been recognised by any of the main ornithological authorities.
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::In the past, treated as a separate species ''Mergus americanus'' by the AOU until 1931, but this has not been recognised more recently by any of the main ornithological authorities<sup>[[#References|[2]]]</sup>.
  
 
==Habitat==   
 
==Habitat==   
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''[[Media:Mergus merganser (song).mp3|Listen in an external program]]''
 
''[[Media:Mergus merganser (song).mp3|Listen in an external program]]''
 
==References==
 
==References==
#{{Ref-Clements6thDec10}}
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#{{Ref-Clements6thDec10}}#[http://avibase.bsc-eoc.org/species.jsp?avibaseid=407E2CA886367DBB Avibase]
 
{{ref}}
 
{{ref}}
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Revision as of 19:01, 6 November 2014

Alternative name: Goosander

Male Goosander
Photo by Digiscoper321
West Sweden, February 2011
Mergus merganser

Identification

Female Goosander
Photo by Ragna
Fetcham mill pond Surrey, January 2006

Adult Male

  • Greenish-black head and upper neck
  • White breast, flanks and belly, often tinged salmon-pink.
  • Black back and upperwing coverts; scapulars white with a narrow black edge.
  • Secondaries white; secondary coverts all-white giving a fully white inner wing (Goosander M. m. merganser) or with dark tips making a dark bar across the white (Common Merganser M. m. americanus).
  • Eclipse plumage from June-July to October-November similar to adult female.

Adult Female

  • Red-brown head meets pale breast in crisp line of division.
  • Well-defined white chin.
  • White breast and belly grading to grey flanks.
  • Pale grey body plumage.

Juvenile

  • Similar to adult female, but with narrow white line on lores, giving a 'striped' effect to the face.
Male and female Common Mergansers
Photo by GaryT
Hammond Lake, Tioga County, Pennsylvania, USA April 2010

Similar Species

Female may be confused with female Red-breasted Merganser, but shows a distinct division between head and chest. Crest is also less shaggy than in female Red-breasted, and the bill distinctly slenderer.

Distribution

Breeding

Europe

Breeds in Iceland and north and west Britain, throughout Scandinavia and across northern Europe from Poland eastwards. Breeding range slowly expanding west and south in Europe, reaching Germany and the Alps over the last 150 years, Scotland in 1871, northern England in 1941, Wales and Ireland in 1970, and a recent colonist in the Netherlands (where first bred in 1996), the Czech Republic, and northern Greece at Lake Prespa.

Asia

Breeds across northern Asia to northern China, Sakhalin and occasionally Hokkaido, with a separate population on the Tibetan Plateau.

North America

Breeds in southeast Alaska and western Canada across the forest zone of central Canada and east to Newfoundland. In the USA breeds in the north-east and around the Great Lakes, and in the west range extends south to northern California, Arizona and New Mexico.

Northern populations are migratory, most others resident or partial migrants, moving to coastal areas close to breeding site. In winter found in southern Britain and northern France east to Poland and in coastal Norway and Sweden. Small numbers also winter in Central Europe, the northern Mediterranean and the Black and Caspian Seas. In the Far East winters from Japan southwards and in North America winters over much of the USA except the north-central states and the Gulf Coast.

Many, if not most, males in the European population leave the females to care for their ducklings in midsummer and fly north to the Varangerfjord in northeast Norway for moulting, before returning in late autumn.

Vagrant to Greenland, the Faroes and Svalbard and south to Portugal and Spain, the Mediterranean islands, north Africa and Israel, also recorded on Bermuda.

Taxonomy

Subspecies

There are three subspecies[1]:

  • M. m. merganser (Goosander).
Breeds across northern Europe and northern Asia.
  • M. m. comatus (Tibetan Goosander).
Restricted to the Tibetan Plateau in central Asia. Slightly larger and finer-billed than M. m. merganser.
  • M. m. americanus (Common Merganser).
Breeds in North America. It has deeper base to bill and the male has dark bar across bases of median coverts.
In the past, treated as a separate species Mergus americanus by the AOU until 1931, but this has not been recognised more recently by any of the main ornithological authorities[2].

Habitat

Breeds along rivers and lakeshores in wooded areas, sometimes on moorland, on passage and in winter on large freshwaters, ofen reservoirs and gravel-pits, sometimes estuaries but rarely on the sea.

Behaviour

The diet includes fish, mussels, shrimps, and aquatic insects.

Vocalisation

<flashmp3>Mergus merganser (song).mp3</flashmp3>
Listen in an external program

References

  1. Clements, JF. 2010. The Clements Checklist of Birds of the World. 6th ed., with updates to December 2010. Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0801445019. Spreadsheet available at http://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist/Clements%206.5.xls/view
  2. Avibase

Recommended Citation

External Links


This link searches for Common Goosander

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