Wood Ducks
Aix sponsa
Description - A beautiful, crested, multicolored
duck, the Wood Duck male is patterned in iridescent greens,
purples and blues with a distinctive white chin patch
and face stripes. The female Wood Duck is greyish with
a broad, white eye ring. The bill is mainly red and the
tail long. The females call is louder than that of the
male.
Distribution - In the west the Wood Duck breeds from
British Columbia south to California and winters near
the Pacific coast no farther north than Washington. It
inhabits wooded rivers, ponds and swamps and visits freshwater
marshes in the late summer and fall.
Biology - Wood Duck nests are lined with down in a
natural tree cavity sometimes up to 50 feet off of the
ground; 9-12 whitish or tan eggs incubate there. This
surface feeding duck eats aquatic plants, seeds, grass,
small aquatic animals and insects. Considered one of the
most beautiful of North American waterfowl, Wood Ducks
were hunted to near extinction in the late 19th and early
20th centuries. The hunting season was closed down and
numbers rose steadily; there are well over a million Wood
Ducks in North America.