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Common Merganser
Mergus merganser
Species
description provided by eNature
Description
22-27" (56-69 cm). Male has flashing white sides,
green head, white breast, and long, thin red bill. Female has gray
body and sides; reddish-brown crested head sharply set off from
white throat. Red-breasted merganser is similar, but male has gray
sides, white neck ring, and rust-colored breast; female has reddish-brown
head that blends into gray of neck.
Voice
Low rasping croaks.
Habitat
Breeds on wooded rivers and ponds; winters mainly on lakes
and rivers, occasionally on salt water.
Nesting 9-12 pale buff or ivory eggs in a down-lined
tree cavity or sometimes on the ground or in an abandoned hawk's
nest.
Range
Breeds across Canada from eastern Alaska, Manitoba, and
Newfoundland south in mountains to California, northern New Mexico,
Great Lakes, and northern New England. Winters south to northern
Mexico, Gulf Coast states, and Georgia (rarely farther). Also in
Eurasia.
Discussion
Although preferring to feed on lakes, common mergansers
are often driven to rivers by cold weather; there they are found
in flocks of 10 to 20 birds, all facing upstream and diving in pursuit
of fish. The narrow bill, with a hooked upper mandible and fine,
saw-like teeth along the edges, is specialized to catch slippery
fish. Pairs are formed in late winter, and until then one is likely
to find flocks composed entirely of males or of females.
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