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Wood Duck
Aix sponsa
Species
description provided by eNature
Description
17-20" (43-51 cm). A beautiful, crested, multicolored duck.
Male patterned in iridescent greens, purples, and blues with distinctive
white chin patch and face stripes; bill mainly red; tail long. Female
grayish with broad white eye ring.
Voice
Female, loud wooo-eeek!; male, softer jeee? or ter-weeeee?
Habitat
Wooded rivers and ponds; wooded swamps. Visits freshwater marshes
in late summer and fall.
Nesting
9-12 whitish or tan eggs in a nest made of down in a natural tree
cavity or a man-made nest box, sometimes up to 50' (15 m) off the
ground.
Range
Breeds from British Columbia south to California, and from Montana
east to Nova Scotia and south to Texas and Florida; absent from
Rocky Mountains and Great Plains. Winters near Pacific Coast north
to Washington, and to New Jersey in East, rarely farther north.
Discussion
One of the most beautiful of American waterfowl, the wood duck was
hunted nearly to extinction during the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. In 1918 the hunting season was closed, and for the next
two decades numbers rose steadily. There are now well over a million
wood ducks in North America. The wood duck's habit of nesting in
cavities enables it to breed in areas lacking suitable ground cover.
The young leave the nest soon after hatching, jumping from the nesting
cavity to the ground or water. Once out of the nest, they travel
through wooded ponds with their mother. Snapping turtles take a
heavy toll of the young.
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