Duck
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- For other uses of the word duck, see Duck (disambiguation)
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Ruddy Shelduck | ||||||||||
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Duck-on-ground.jpg
Ducks exploit a variety of food sources such as grasses, grains and aquatic plants, fish, insects, and the like. The sound made by some female ducks is called a "quack"; a common (and false) urban legend is that quacks do not produce an echo.
The males (drakes) of northern species often have showy plumage, but this is moulted in summer to give a more female-like appearance, the "eclipse" plumage. In many species, moulting birds are temporarily flightless; they seek out protected habitat with good food supplies during this period. This moult typically precedes migration.
Some duck species, mainly those breeding in the temperate and arctic northern hemisphere, are migratory, but others are not. Some, particularly in Australia where rainfall is patchy and erratic, are nomadic, seeking out the temporary lakes and pools that form after localised heavy rain.
In many areas, wild ducks of various species are hunted for food or sport, by shooting, or formerly by decoys. From this came the expression "sitting duck" to mean "an easy target".
Ducks have many economic uses, being farmed for their meat, eggs, feathers and down feathers. Most domestic ducks were bred from the wild Mallard, Anas platyrhyncha, but many breeds have become much larger than their wild ancestor, with a "hull length" (from base of neck to base of tail) of 12 inches or more and routinely able to swallow an adult British Common Frog, Rana temporaria, whole.
Ducks are sometimes confused with several types of unrelated water birds with similar forms, such as loons or divers, grebes, gallinules, and coots.
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Etymology
The word duck meaning the bird, came from the verb "to duck" meaning to bend down as if to get under something, because of the way it feeds; compare the Dutch word duiken = "to dive". This happened because the older Old English word for "duck" came to be pronounced the same as the word for "end": other Germanic languages still have words similar to end, compare Dutch eend = "duck", eind = "end".
Gallery
Fictional ducks
- Kyanchome from the anime series Zatch Bell
- The Ugly Duckling by Hans Christian Andersen (In the end not actually a duckling, but a Cygnet)
- Walt Disney's Donald Duck, Huey, Dewey and Louie Duck, Daisy Duck, Scrooge McDuck
- Warner Bros.' Daffy Duck
- Alfred J. Kwak, Dutch cartoon character
- The mascot of the University of Oregon, Taylor, Texas High School, the Long Island minor league baseball team, Val-Joubert primary school in Ste-Paule, Quebec. Variations include the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim and the American Hockey League team Cincinnati Mighty Ducks.
- Joey's and Chandler's pet The Duck from the popular American sitcom Friends
- Duckman Drake, a humanoid shotgun-wielding duck from the Timesplitters video games.
External links
- "The quack doesn't echo" urban legend (http://www.snopes.com/critters/wild/duckecho.htm) (from Snopes.com)
Template:Cookbookals:Ente ang:Ened bg:Патица de:Ente eo:Anasedoj es:Pato fr:Canard it:Anatra ja:鴨 nl:Eenden nds:Ant pt:Pato sv:Anka zh:鸭
Categories: Anatidae | Birds | Heraldic birds | Poultry