Today, we’ll take a look at a diverse array of North American ducks. Species I’ve worked with are: American black duck, northern pintail, green-winged teal, blue-winged teal, cinnamon teal, American wigeon, gadwall, Canvasback, redhead, lesser scaup, greater scaup, ring-necked duck, American wood duck, North American ruddy duck, bufflehead, Barrow’s goldeneye, hooded merganser, and common eider.
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The namesake ring of the ring-necked duck is very hard to see in a live individual, especially one in the field, at a distance. It's always seemed to me that ring-BILLED duck would be a much better name.
Too often, there’s a tendency for both visitors and zoo staff alike to view waterfowl as something of a monolith – duck are ducks. Exhibit and husbandry needs are assumed to be the same, and the birds themselves are often seen as interchangeable. In reality, the many species are very diverse in their needs and behavior, with ramifications for their management. The facility where I gained most of my waterfowl experience essentially had one large duck exhibit, with a few other birds sharing an exhibit elsewhere in the zoo with turtles and beavers.
An opinion that I’ve become increasingly adamant about is that keeping animals in captivity should be informed by study of the animals in their natural state. I never thought that was a controversial opinion until I worked with this duck exhibit, and was shocked to find out that there was a keeper who had worked this section for over 5 years and still couldn’t tell the species of ducks apart (this section of the zoo contained the primates, which she wanted to work with, and the ducks, in her mind, were the undesired add-on that came with having the monkeys). When I vented about this to another keeper – how can you take care of an animal properly if you don’t even know what it is! – the other keeper just shrugged and said, “If the care is the same, does it really matter what it is?”
Yes! Because the care should
not be the same!
(You could also make this case across taxa – monkeys, antelope, varanids, etc – each species thrives under slightly different circumstances)
Wood ducks are, as the name might suggest to those who bother to learn the name, ducks associated with woodlands and forests. They are perching birds and benefit from opportunities to use the vertical space in exhibits. I’m glad that our birds were full-winged, as I’ve seen pinioned wood ducks in other zoos, and it’s struck me as a more significant loss of natural behavior for that species than it would for a less-arboreal duck. Being able to fly and get up high also allows these birds, which I’ve found to be some of the shyer, less-assertive ducks, to distance themselves from rowdier exhibit mates.
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A wood duck hen with her brood
At the other end of the spectrum, ruddy ducks are very aquatic. As with the black-necked swans I mentioned earlier, having legs set far back on the body is usually a sign that a species of bird is more aquatic, and in truth, ruddy ducks are kinda pitiful on land. An ideal exhibit for this species would let them swim just about anywhere they need to go. And though they are small, they are fierce. I once transported a ruddy across the zoo without even grabbing it – it bit my finger, and didn’t let go until it was in its new home. If ruddy ducks were the size of trumpeter swans, I think we’d have to manage them protected contact.
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Plucky and pugnacious, the ruddy duck crams a lot of personality into a little frame
Dabbling ducks work well in exhibits with shallow pools, where you can anchor food to the bottom of the pond and they can up-end for it. Diving ducks do best with deep pools to let them, well, dive. And despite the prevalence of Purina duck chow (fed in feeders) and Mazuri waterfowl (a floating pellet), the natural diets of the birds are different. I enjoyed tossing diced fish into the pools for the mergansers to dive after, giving them a chance to express that behavior, and sometimes provided live fish as well.
(Side note for interested parties: mergansers, more than any other waterfowl, are susceptible to the dangers of ingesting coins tossed by visitors into their pools. Their entire evolutionary history is hardwired with the mindset of “chase the silvery, shiny thing in the water,” and if something is tossed into the pool, they are on it like a flash).
All of the duck species had their various personalities – some more stand-offish, some more serene, some more outgoing. My absolute favorites were the common eiders. These are the largest of the North American ducks, and our drake was a big boy that we nicknamed “Cartman” after the South Park character. The ducks shared their aviary with a yellow-crowned night heron, and when we entered the aviary to take care of the birds, we had a tendency to set down the heron’s diet on the ground as we closed the door. Cartman would haul his big, feathery butt over in a hurry once we did that and try to snatch up the heron diet (ground meat and diced fish) if we weren’t watching him. We’d send him off with a sweep of the rake and some curses, but his confidence and optimism never waned, and he’d be back at it the next day. His mate was much more demure, and she kept a more respectful distance.
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Cartman the Common Eider paddling along
Our curator told us that the eiders were a trial bird on our part, since she took it as gospel that the sea ducks – not just the eiders, but the scoters, harlequin, and long-tailed – could never be kept at zoos in our region due to the heat, the humidity, and the asper (these species did occur in our vicinity in the winter). Imagine my surprise, as I went down the waterfowl rabbit-hole, in finding that one of the premier breeders of these species in the US is… in Louisiana.
The most spectacular part of being a northern waterfowl keeper is watching the male birds don their breeding plumage and engage in their courtship displays. Our exhibit had originally been devised as a sort of living waterfowl encyclopedia, with the idea of having a pair of as many species as possible for comparison and study. The inevitable problem with a set-up like that (besides the generalization of habitat and husbandry), is that birds eventually die, and then you wind up with singletons. Maybe these singletons will pair off with other singletons, or try forcing themselves on other pairs as unwanted third wheels. If I was redoing that collection, I’d probably have opted for a smaller number of species with greater numbers (and focusing on species that were more different – maybe not having a pair each of lesser scaup AND greater scaup AND ring-necked, but two or three pairs of one species).
If I was redoing the exhibit, I’d have put more species-specific touches in, as well as, ideally, underwater viewing – watching some of these birds sweep through the water like torpedoes is a very impressive sight. I’d also have wanted benches to encourage visitors to actually sit, stay, and watch the birds. Ducks are always full of drama – lots of chasing, lots of bickering, lots of fighting and mating (when I was a supervisor, I had lots of worried keepers come to be about ducks fighting and bullying each other, and had to explain that much of what they were seeing was just how ducks express themselves). Visitors really do like ducks, despite what we tell ourselves – after all, they’re one of the first groups of birds most people are able to recognize as being a distinct taxon, even if they don’t know the names of all the species. When we stop treating them as filler animals and acknowledge them as the stars and divas that they truly are, they make an excellent exhibit.