General
Mallard: Medium-sized dabbling duck with gray body and chestnut-brown breast. Head is green and neck ring is white. Bill is yellow-green. Wing speculum is white-bordered metallic purple-blue. Tail is dark with distinct white edges and two curled black feathers. Legs and feet are orange. Female is mottled brown with mostly white tail, has a brown-saddled orange bill, and no curled tail feathers. Juvenile resembles female but has duller bill. Eclipse male is similar to female but is grayer overall and has olive-green bill. Hybridizes with Black Ducks, Mottled Ducks, and domestic ducks.
Range and Habitat
Mallard Duck: Breeds from Alaska and Quebec south to southern California, Virginia, Texas, and northern Mexico. Spends winters throughout the U.S. and south to Central America and the West Indies. Preferred habitats include ponds, lakes, marshes, small river bends, bays, ditches, and city ponds.
Listen to Call
Voice Text
"kwek-kwek-kwek"
Interesting Facts
The Mallard is the ancestor of all domestic duck breeds, except the Muscovy Duck.
Mallards are the most abundant and widespread of all waterfowl; every year millions are harvested by hunters with little effect on their numbers. The greatest threat to mallards is loss of habitat, but they readily adapt to human disturbances.
They frequently breed with domestic ducks, producing a large variety of patterns and colors. They also hybridize with wild species such as the closely related American Black Duck and even occasionally with Northern Pintails
A group of mallards has many collective nouns, including a "battling", "daggle", "doppling", "lute", and "sword" of mallards.
Author
Gary Owen Dick
Related Birds
Northern Pintail
American Wigeon
Northern Shoveler
Red-breasted Merganser
Wood Duck
American Black Duck
Common Merganser
Gadwall
Eurasian Wigeon
Mottled Duck
Spot-billed Duck
.