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Not well up on ducks, what is this one please? (1 Viewer)

Jane P

Jane
I am ok with garden birds but not sure what type of duck this is? Advice please!
 

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A mallard with a pigmentation mutation allowing the pigment that normally would only colour the head feathers to colour the body feathers as well.
 
Would have to agree, the curly tail feathers are the giveaway for mallard. What an odd bird!
 
It is odd, isn't it. That's what prompted my husband to photograph it. I never thought about it being a mutation, just thought it was some sort of strange duck - which I suppose it is!
 
Are ducks more likely to show variation or to crossbreed than songbirds and the like? Through posts and through other reading, I've noticed more variation in this group.

-Craig
 
I think ducks are particularly prone to cross-breeding - enough to get "common" hybrids described in field guides. And Mallards in particular will have a go at anything!
 
I think that it is because ducks are randy little b****rs and will mate with anything.:eek!: There's also the fact that ducks have been domesticated for many thousands of years during which time a certain amount of selective breeding will have been done, whether intentional or not, by the farmers.
Passerines courtship & breeding behaviour tends to be more strictly defined, so less chance of two birds of different species mating, and they have not been domesticated as such.
 
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birdman said:
I think ducks are particularly prone to cross-breeding - enough to get "common" hybrids described in field guides. And Mallards in particular will have a go at anything!

Hybrid ducks are seemingly alot more "common" than other types of avian hybrids... on the whole, hybirds are a rare thing so I would imagine by the use of common, they mean common in terms of occurrence of hybridization.

I know what I mean anyway. 8-P :girl:
 
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