Hey, all.
A duck in the mallard superspecies complex has been present at Waneka Lake & environs, Boulder Co., for close to a month now. The mallard superspecies complex comprises the mallard, Mexican duck, mottled duck, American black duck, Hawaiian duck, and Laysan duck, plus other species found outside the ABA Area. And their many intergrades!
There have been some differences of opinion about the duck at and around Waneka Lake. Which is fine. Tricky birds are the ones from which we learn the most. When I first saw the Waneka Lake bird, I thought it was a mallard x Mexican duck intergrade. I'd been out of the country and wasn't aware that there had been discussion back-channel about the bird. In the past several days, though, I've come around to wondering why this bird isn't a mottled duck or, at least, a bird with mottled duck ancestry.
Here are a few pics from earlier this Sun. afternoon, Apr. 27, seriously de-rezzed for posting to Google Groups:


Here are some characters that I think indicate mottled duck, rather than Mexican duck, for the Waneka Lake duck:
* "school bus" yellow bill (not dusky yellow-green)
* extensive black at base of bill, including gape spot
* warmish tones overall, especially the contour feathers
* pale throat with weak buffy tones (whence fulvigula, the specific epithet of mottled)
But I'm not sure about that, not at all. I got no dog in this fight. Honest. Whatever it is, it's a cool bird, and I thought I'd put my thoughts out there because, Why not? And, if you're wondering, I've eBirded it as "Anas sp." Talk about playing it safe. Incidentally, so-called "triple hybrids," birds with mallard, mottled duck, & Mexican duck ancestry, are not uncommon in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. I'm just saying.
. . . . .
Okay, in other news:
Lots of other stuff of late at the Waneka/Greenlee/Hecla complex. For example, a light-morph adult broad-winged hawk sailing over, due north, this Sun. afternoon. Perfect conditions: late April, warm, south winds; plus, we had just had "weather." (I've noticed anecdotally that Boulder broad-wings are best detected on the heels of spring storms.) Was anybody watching from Broadway Ave. westward in Boulder today? Because I bet there were more passing over out there.
Also a couple of FOY northern house wrens near the Greenlee feeders today. And American avocets doing the nasty at Greenlee marsh. Snapping turtles, Chelydra serpentina, too; indeed, they've been doing it essentially nonstop there for several days now.
Yesterday at nearby Prince Lake No. 2, a FOY Brewer sparrow. Also a loggerhead shrike festooning a barbed wire fence with moribund victims. Leatherman's ears perk up...
And back on Fri., Apr. 25, in the daylong drizzle at Waneka/Greenlee/Helca, a nice smattering of sandpipers (Wilson snipe, Wilson phalarope, spotted sandpiper, solitary sandpiper, lesser yellowlegs, greater yellowlegs, and least sandpiper). Also osprey, American bushtit, red-breasted nuthatch, chipping sparrow, dark-eyed junco, and various flavors of yellow-rumped warbler. A spotted towhee was giving a call consistent with that described in the literature for the arcticus subspecies. However, the literature is muddled in the matter...
Oh, one other thing! Today. This afternoon. On the north shore "beach" of Waneka Lake, a fine showing by twelve-spotted tiger beetles, Cicindela duodecimguttata. If you go looking for the Waneka duck, try for the tiger beetles. They're beautiful.
Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder Co.
-- A duck in the mallard superspecies complex has been present at Waneka Lake & environs, Boulder Co., for close to a month now. The mallard superspecies complex comprises the mallard, Mexican duck, mottled duck, American black duck, Hawaiian duck, and Laysan duck, plus other species found outside the ABA Area. And their many intergrades!
There have been some differences of opinion about the duck at and around Waneka Lake. Which is fine. Tricky birds are the ones from which we learn the most. When I first saw the Waneka Lake bird, I thought it was a mallard x Mexican duck intergrade. I'd been out of the country and wasn't aware that there had been discussion back-channel about the bird. In the past several days, though, I've come around to wondering why this bird isn't a mottled duck or, at least, a bird with mottled duck ancestry.
Here are a few pics from earlier this Sun. afternoon, Apr. 27, seriously de-rezzed for posting to Google Groups:
Here are some characters that I think indicate mottled duck, rather than Mexican duck, for the Waneka Lake duck:
* "school bus" yellow bill (not dusky yellow-green)
* extensive black at base of bill, including gape spot
* warmish tones overall, especially the contour feathers
* pale throat with weak buffy tones (whence fulvigula, the specific epithet of mottled)
But I'm not sure about that, not at all. I got no dog in this fight. Honest. Whatever it is, it's a cool bird, and I thought I'd put my thoughts out there because, Why not? And, if you're wondering, I've eBirded it as "Anas sp." Talk about playing it safe. Incidentally, so-called "triple hybrids," birds with mallard, mottled duck, & Mexican duck ancestry, are not uncommon in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. I'm just saying.
. . . . .
Okay, in other news:
Lots of other stuff of late at the Waneka/Greenlee/Hecla complex. For example, a light-morph adult broad-winged hawk sailing over, due north, this Sun. afternoon. Perfect conditions: late April, warm, south winds; plus, we had just had "weather." (I've noticed anecdotally that Boulder broad-wings are best detected on the heels of spring storms.) Was anybody watching from Broadway Ave. westward in Boulder today? Because I bet there were more passing over out there.
Also a couple of FOY northern house wrens near the Greenlee feeders today. And American avocets doing the nasty at Greenlee marsh. Snapping turtles, Chelydra serpentina, too; indeed, they've been doing it essentially nonstop there for several days now.
Yesterday at nearby Prince Lake No. 2, a FOY Brewer sparrow. Also a loggerhead shrike festooning a barbed wire fence with moribund victims. Leatherman's ears perk up...
And back on Fri., Apr. 25, in the daylong drizzle at Waneka/Greenlee/Helca, a nice smattering of sandpipers (Wilson snipe, Wilson phalarope, spotted sandpiper, solitary sandpiper, lesser yellowlegs, greater yellowlegs, and least sandpiper). Also osprey, American bushtit, red-breasted nuthatch, chipping sparrow, dark-eyed junco, and various flavors of yellow-rumped warbler. A spotted towhee was giving a call consistent with that described in the literature for the arcticus subspecies. However, the literature is muddled in the matter...
Oh, one other thing! Today. This afternoon. On the north shore "beach" of Waneka Lake, a fine showing by twelve-spotted tiger beetles, Cicindela duodecimguttata. If you go looking for the Waneka duck, try for the tiger beetles. They're beautiful.
Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder Co.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Colorado Birds" group.
To post to this group, send email to cobirds@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/cobirds
* All posts should be signed with the poster's full name and city. Include bird species and location in the subject line when appropriate.
* Join Colorado Field Ornithologists https://cobirds.org/membership/
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Colorado Birds" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to cobirds+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/CAGk944cMAqCHT9_xDHzKS1apvwb_VPRkP%3DMVoL_vPOB-2P5Fng%40mail.gmail.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment