The
Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), probably
the best-known and most recognizable of all ducks, is a dabbling duck which
breeds throughout the temperate and
sub-tropical areas of North America, Europe,
Asia, Africa, New Zealand
(where it is currently the most common duck
species), and Australia. It is
strongly
migratory in the northern
parts of its breeding range, and winters farther south.
For
example, in North America it winters south to Mexico, but also
regularly strays into Central
America and the Caribbean
between September and May.
The Mallard is the ancestor of all
domestic ducks, except the few breeds derived
from the unrelated
Muscovy Duck
(
Cairinia moschata).
The
Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory
Waterbirds (
AEWA) applies to the
mallard.
Description
Close up photo showing the green colours of the male
Mallard.
|
Drake in flight
|
Female landing
|
|
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The Mallard is 56–65 cm long, has a wingspan of 81–98 cm,
and weighs 0.9–1.2 kg. The breeding male is unmistakable, with
a green head, black rear end and a yellowish orange (can also
contain some red) bill tipped with black (as opposed to the dark
brown bill in females). The female Mallard is light brown, like
most female dabbling ducks. However, both the female and male
Mallards have distinct purple
speculum edged with white, prominent in
flight or at rest (though temporarily shedded during the annual
summer molt). In non-breeding (
eclipse)
plumage the drake becomes drab, looking more like the female, but
still distinguishable by its yellow bill and reddish breast.
The Mallard is a rare example of both
Allen's Rule and
Bergmann's Rule in birds. Bergmann's Rule,
which states that polar forms tend to be larger than related ones
from warmer climates, has numerous examples in birds. Allen's Rule
says that appendages like ears tend to be smaller in polar forms to
minimize heat loss, and larger in tropical and desert equivalents
to facilitate heat diffusion, and that the polar taxa are stockier
overall. Examples of this rule in birds are rare, as they lack
external ears. However, the bill of ducks is very well supplied
with blood vessels and is vulnerable to cold.
The size
of the Mallard varies clinally, and birds from Greenland
, although larger than birds further south, have
smaller bills and are stockier. It is sometimes separated as
subspecies Greenland
Mallard (
A. p. conboschas).
In captivity,
domestic ducks come in
wild-type plumages, white, and other colours. Most of these colour
variants are also known in domestic mallards not bred as
livestock, but kept as pets,
aviary birds, etc., where they are rare but
increasing in availability.
A noisy species, the male has a nasal call, the female has a
"
quack" stereotypically associated with
ducks.
Ecology
The Mallard inhabits most
wetlands,
including
parks, small
ponds and rivers, and usually feeds by dabbling for
plant food or grazing; there are reports of it eating
frogs.
[32127] It usually nests on a river bank, but not
always near water. It is highly gregarious outside of the breeding
season and will form large
flock,
which are known as a sord.
Breeding behavior
Mallards form pairs only until the female lays eggs, at which time
she is left by the male. The clutch is 8–13 eggs, which are
incubated for 27–28 days to hatching with 50–60 days to fledgling.
The ducklings are
precocial, and can swim
and feed themselves on insects as soon as they hatch, although they
stay near the female for protection.
When they pair off with mating partners, often one or several
drakes will end up "left out". This group will sometimes target an
isolated female duck — chasing, pestering and pecking at her until
she weakens (a phenomenon referred to by researchers as
rape
flight), at which point each male will take turns copulating
with the female. Male Mallards will also occasionally chase other
males in the same way. (In one documented case, a male Mallard
copulated with another male he was chasing after said male had been
killed when he flew into a glass window.)
Ancestor of domestic ducks
Mallard (
Anas platyrhynchos) is the ancestor of almost all
of the varieties of
domestic ducks.
Domestic ducks belong to the subfamily Anatinae of the waterfowl
family Anatidae. The wild Mallard and
Muscovy duck (
Cairina moschata) are
believed to be the ancestors of all domestic ducks.
Genetic pollution, hybridization and systematics
The release of
feral Mallard Ducks in areas
where they are not native sometimes creates problems through
interbreeding with indigenous
waterfowl.
These
non-migratory Mallards
interbreed with indigenous wild ducks from local populations of
closely related species through
genetic pollution by producing fertile
offspring. Complete
hybridization of
various species of wild ducks gene pools could result in the
extinction of many indigenous waterfowl. The wild Mallard itself is
the ancestor of most
domestic ducks
and its naturally evolved wild gene pool gets genetically polluted
in turn by the
domesticated and feral
populations.
Mallards frequently interbreed with their closest relatives in the
genus Anas, such
as the
American Black Duck, and
also with species more distantly related, for example the
Northern Pintail, leading to various
hybrids that may be fully fertile.
This is quite unusual among different species, and apparently has
its reasons in the fact that the Mallard
evolved very rapidly and not too long ago, during
the
Late Pleistocene only. The
distinct lineages of this radiation are usually kept separate due
to non-overlapping ranges and
behavioral
cues, but are still not fully genetically incompatible. Mallards
and their domesticated
conspecifics are,
of course, also fully interfertile.
The
Mallard is considered an invasive
species in New
Zealand
. There, and elsewhere, Mallards are
spreading with increasing
urbanization
and hybridizing with local relatives. Over time, a continuum of
hybrids ranging between almost typical examples of either species
will develop; the
speciation process
beginning to reverse itself. This has created
conservation concerns for relatives of
the Mallard, such as the
Hawaiian
Duck, the
A. s. superciliosa subspecies of the
Pacific Black Duck, the
American Black Duck, the
Florida Duck,
Meller's
Duck, the
Yellow-billed Duck,
and the
Mexican Duck, in the latter
case even leading to a dispute whether these birds should be
considered a species (and thus entitled to more conservation
research and funding) or included in the mallard.
Like elsewhere worldwide the alien Mallards are also causing severe
“genetic pollution” of
South Africa’s
biodiversity by breeding with endemic
ducks. The hybrids of Mallard and the
Yellow-billed Duck are fertile and can
produce more hybrid offspring. If this continues, only hybrids will
occur and in the long term this will result in the extinction of
various indigenous waterfowl. The Mallard duck can cross breed with
63 other species and is posing a severe threat to the genetic
integrity of indigenous waterfowl. Mallards and their hybrids
compete with indigenous birds for resources such as food, nest
sites and roosting sites.
On the
other hand, the Chinese Spotbill is
currently introgressing into the Mallard populations of the
Primorsky
Krai
, possibly due to habitat changes from global warming. The
Mariana Mallard was a resident
allopatric population - in most respects a good
species - apparently initially derived from Mallard ×
Pacific Black Duck hybrids;
unfortunately, it became
extinct in the
1980s. In addition, feral domestic ducks interbreeding with
Mallards have led to a size increase - especially in drakes - in
most Mallards in urban areas. Rape flights between normal-sized
females and such stronger males are liable to end with the female
being drowned by the males' combined weight.
It was generally assumed that as the spectacular nuptial plumage of
Mallard drakes is obviously the result of
sexual selection - most species in the
mallard group being
sexually
monomorphic -, hybrid matings would preferentially take place
between females of monomorphic relatives and Mallard drakes instead
of the other way around. But this generalization was found to be
incorrect.
Note that it is not the hybridization itself that causes most
conservation concerns. The
Laysan Duck
is an insular relative of the Mallard with a very small and
fluctuating population. Mallards sometimes arrive on its island
home during migration, and can be expected to occasionally have
remained and hybridized with Laysan Ducks as long as these species
exist.
But
these hybrids are less well adapted to the peculiar ecological
conditions of Laysan
Island
than the local ducks, and thus have lower fitness, and furthermore, there were -
apart from a brief time in the early 20th century when the Laysan
Duck was almost extinct - always much more Laysan Ducks than stray
Mallards. Thus, in this case, the hybrid lineages would
rapidly fail.
In the cases mentioned above, however, ecological changes and
hunting have led to a decline of local species; for example, the
New Zealand Gray Duck's population declined drastically due to
overhunting in the mid-20th century (Williams & Basse 2006). In
the Hawaiian Duck, it seems that hybrid offspring are less
well-adapted to native habitat and that utilizing them in
reintroduction projects makes these less than successful. In
conclusion, the crucial point underlying the problems of Mallards
"hybridizing away" relatives is far less a consequence of Mallards
spreading, but of local ducks declining;
allopatric speciation and isolating
behavior have produced today's diversity of Mallard-like ducks
despite the fact that in most if not all of these populations,
hybridization must
always have occurred to some extent.
Given time and a population of sufficient size exists,
natural selection ought to suppress
harmful
allele combinations to a negligible
level.
The aforementioned confounds analysis of the evolution
considerably. Analyses of good samples of
mtDNA sequence give the
confusing picture one expects from a wide-ranging species that has
evolved probably not much earlier than the
Plio-/
Pleistocene
boundary, around 2
mya. Mallards appear
to be closer to their
Indo-Pacific
relatives than to their American ones judging from
biogeography.
Considering mtDNA
D-loop sequence data, they may have evolved more
probably than not in the general area of Siberia
; mallard
bones rather abruptly appear in food remains of ancient humans and
other deposits of fossil bones in Europe, without a good candidate for a local
predecessor species. The large
ice
age paleosubspecies which made
up at least the European and W Asian populations during the
Pleistocene has been named
Anas
platyrhynchos palaeoboschas.
As
expected, haplotypes typical of American
Mallard relatives and Spotbills can be found in Mallards around the
Bering
Sea
. Interestingly, the Aleutian
Islands
turned out to hold a population of Mallards that
appear to be evolving towards a good subspecies as gene flow with other populations is very
limited. This unexpected result suggests that
reevaluation of the Greenland, Iceland
, and NE
Canada
populations
according to molecular and morphological characters is
warranted.
Gallery
Image:Anas platyrhynchos LC0017.jpg | Male (top) and female
(bottom) swimmingImage:Anas Platyrhynchos Mallard Female.jpg| Close
up of a femaleImage:Magamo fem2.JPG|Close up of the mouth
(female)Image:Mallard Dinner.jpg | Mallard Ducks feeding near a
riverImage:Mallard Anas platyrhynchos Full Body 2000px.jpg|Mallard
drake standingImage:Female mallard nest - natures pics edit2.jpg|An
adult female with a brood of ducklingsImage:Mallard ducklings.jpg|A
trio of ducklings.Image:Baby under mom.jpg|The new hatched
ducklings are hiding under their mother.Image:Female Mallard with
12 ducklings (Grand Canal, Dublin).jpg|Urbanized female mallard
with brood of 12 ducklingsImage:Turtle ducklings.jpg|A
turtle and a brood of ducklings sharing
microhabitatImage:Male mallard3.jpg|A Mallard
drake swimming.Image:Mallard is flapping his
wings.jpg|Wing-Flapping
Image:Snow crystallization in Akureyri
2005-02-26 15-57-55.jpeg|Drake, domestic duck × mallard, Akureyri
(Iceland
); note
stocky body shape.Image:Mallard flying.jpg| A male mallard
flying.Image:Males Anas platyrhynchos 2 .jpg|Two
malesImage:Mallard-snow-kingston-ontario-march-2008.JPG| Mallards
in the snow.
Kingston
, Ontario
, Canada
. 10
March 2008.Image:Female Mallard Duck Rest 3.jpg|Female mallard duck
resting.
Image:Brown bird in Ottawa.JPG|Female
Mallard resting on a rock on the Saint Lawrence River
Image:Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos)
female.jpg|Female Mallard with head down in the water
Image:mallard
0587.jpg|Female and male at Mustapuro in Marjaniemi
, Helsinki
Image:Mallard_Drake.jpg|A Mallard drake
resting in a pond at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden
File:Zürich - Hafen
Riesbach - Stockenten IMG 1614.JPG|Mallards in Zürich-Seebach
Image:Mallard drake 2009.jpg|Mallard drake
standing on the pavement at a public park in
SicilyFile:Ducklings at Lost Lagoon.jpg|Ducklings
at Lost
Lagoon
, Vancouver
, Canada
Footnotes
References
- American
Ornithologists' Union (AOU) (1983): Check-list of North
American Birds (6th edition). American Ornithologists' Union,
Washington, DC.
- Avise, John C.; Ankney, C. Davison & Nelson, William S.
(1990): Mitochondrial Gene Trees and the Evolutionary Relationship
of Mallard and Black Ducks. Evolution 44(4):
1109-1119. (HTML abstract and first page image)
- Bagemihl, Bruce (1999): Biological Exuberance: Animal
Homosexuality and Natural Diversity: 479-481. St. Martin's
Press. ISBN 0312192398
- Database entry includes justification for why this species is
of least concern
- Gillespie, Grant D. (1985): Hybridization, introgression, and
morphometric differentiation between Mallard (Anas
platyrhynchos) and Grey Duck (Anas superciliosa) in
Otago, New Zealand. Auk 102
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- Griffin, C.R.; Shallenberger, F.J. & Fefer, S.I. (1989):
Hawaii's endangered waterbirds: a resource management challenge.
In: Sharitz, R.R. & Gibbons, I.W. (eds.):
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[English with Russian abstract] DOI:
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Auk 122 (3): 949-965.
[English with Russian abstract] DOI:
10.1642/0004-8038(2005)122[0949:POTMAP]2.0.CO;2 PDF fulltext. Erratum: Auk 122 (4):
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mallard? Florida Wildlife 48 (3): 29-31. DOC fulltext
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fulvigula). Conservation Genetics 2 (2): 87–102.
PDF fulltext
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necrophilia in the Mallard Anas platyrhynchos (Aves:
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External links