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green winged teal

Anas carolinensis

Description:

spotted at rockport texas. the duck was taking a bath and preening. This dabbling duck is strongly migratory and winters far south of its breeding range. It is highly gregarious outside of the breeding season and will form large flocks. In flight, the fast, twisting flocks resemble waders. This is the smallest North American dabbling duck. The breeding male has grey flanks and back, with a yellow rear end and a white-edged green speculum, obvious in flight or at rest. It has a chestnut head with a green eye patch. It is distinguished from drake Common Teals (the Eurasian relative of this bird) by a vertical white stripe on side of breast, the lack of both a horizontal white scapular stripe and the lack of thin buff lines on its head. The females are light brown, with plumage much like a female Mallard. They can be distinguished from most ducks on size, shape, and the speculum. Separation from female Common Teal is problematic. In non-breeding (eclipse) plumage, the drake looks more like the female.

Habitat:

wetlands

1 Species ID Suggestions

Green-winged Teal
Anas carolinensis Green-winged Teal


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2 Comments

SusanEllison
SusanEllison 11 years ago

thanks Laura

LauraMaria
LauraMaria 11 years ago

What a beautiful duck, it looks similar to the Eurasian Teal we get over here :) But it's a different species called the green-winged teal. Nice find, Susan!

SusanEllison
Spotted by
SusanEllison

Rockport, Texas, USA

Spotted on Mar 5, 2013
Submitted on Mar 26, 2013

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