The Calls of Ducks & Geese
By Lang Elliott and Kevin Colver
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Learn the songs and calls of 50 waterfowl species found across North America. An audio soundtrack combined with detailed text and beautiful color photographs make this a useful guide for any birder. From the distinctive quack of the American black duck and whistled "peep" of the cinnamon teal to the cuckoolike call of the pied-billed grebe and yodel of the yellow-billed loon, this package covers waterfowl species in an easy-to-use format. Includes dabblers, sea ducks, geese, and other waterfowl.
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The Calls of Ducks & Geese - Lang Elliott
Contents
1. Mallard
Anas platyrhynchos
Mallards are one of North America’s most ubiquitous—and vocal—ducks. The Mallard is a bird of freshwater shallows, where it tips its tail up to feed on submerged vegetation and invertebrates. Mallards typically winter on the coasts in saltwater marshes. Males (drakes) can be recognized by their familiar green iridescent heads and chestnut breasts; females (hens) are a more muted brown with streaks. Both sexes have a royal blue speculum bordered by white stripes and bright orange legs and feet. These are noisy ducks in the air and on the water. The vocalizations of females and males are quite different, however, and only the female gives the loud quack commonly associated with the species.
ON THE CD
1. Male lands and gives rhaeb calls: Drake Mallards do not quack like hens. Their common call is a soft, nasal rhaeb that indicates mild arousal or alarm. A doublet version, rhaeb-rhaeb, is often made during aggressive encounters between males. (28 May 1993, Manitoba, Lang Elliott)
2. Female flyby: (6 June 1993, New York, Lang Elliott)
3. Female decrescendo quacks, male rhaebs, and female cackling: When separated from her mate, the female establishes contact with a loud series of seven or eight quacks that decrease in volume and pitch. During courtship, females respond to an intruding male with froglike cackles as they swim away, repeatedly flicking their bills to one side: cack-cack-cack-cack. (13 November 1998, Virginia, Lang Elliott)
4. Courting male grunt-whistles: A high whistle preceded by a soft grunt made by the male Mallard functions as a courtship call. (13 November 1998, Virginia, Lang Elliott)
5. Female persistent quacking: In the spring, during the prelaying period when a pair first settles on a breeding area, the flying or swimming female often makes a persistent quacking for long periods. The quacks in such a sequence are evenly spaced and of a constant intensity. (3 May 1993, Manitoba, Lang Elliott)
2. American Black Duck
Anas rubripes
Alarge resident of eastern North American freshwater wetlands, American Black Ducks are named for their dark plumage, which distinguishes them from the similar, more numerous Mallards with which they frequently coexist. Female Mallards are often confused with black ducks but are a lighter brown. The two species are known to hybridize.
Migrating black ducks usually follow major river corridors and the Atlantic shoreline to reach wintering sites in salt marshes from Nova Scotia south to the mid-Atlantic coast. A primary target of hunters in the early 1900s, their numbers are slowly on the rebound. Like most dabbling ducks, they are able to leap vertically out of the water into flight to escape danger.
ON THE CD
1. Female quacks: The familiar quack of the female American Black Duck, similar to the Mallard’s, is most often heard in mornings and evenings. The call attracts mates and also signals a female’s readiness to begin egg laying. A longer quaaack signals disturbance or alarm. Listen for the wing whistles as these ducks spring off the water and take flight. (20 September 1989, Quebec, Bill Evans)
2. Courting group: A rheebreeb call is most commonly made by males. Females respond with quacks and a fast, coarse, chuttering kwe kwe kwe. (23 May 1999, Michigan, Martyn Stewart)
3. Gadwall
Anas strepera
These large dabbling ducks inhabit open lakes and marshes, where they feed from the surface on seeds and aquatic plants. The male Gadwall is mostly gray with a brown head and black tail. Females are easily confused with female Mallard and American Black Ducks but have white belly feathers that are discernible at the waterline when the birds are swimming. Gadwalls breed throughout the prairie states of the north-central United States and prairie provinces of Canada. They winter in ponds and marshes in the South and coastal Mexico, with large concentrations along the Louisiana and Texas coasts.