THE WORLD BIRDS - An Online Bird Book
WATERFOWL - Whistling Ducks
The term waterfowl is used to describe any member of the order Anseriformes. A series of articles describes all the waterfowl. This specific article describes the
"whistling ducks " which belong to family Anatidae, subfamily Dendrocygninae.
Anseriformes
Most species of the order Anseriformes spend a considerable amount of time in water. In fact, they are called waterfowls. Their webbed feet make for efficient swimming. A few species spend little time in water and thus their feet are only partially webbed. Most waterfowl are also good flyers, many migrating long distances to escape the cold and others migrating shorter distances for optimizing their food supply. All species, except the screamers, have a wide and relatively flat bill. The shape of a species bill and also their tongue is a function of their diet. Considering the entire order, they eat aquatic plants, grasses, sedges, algae, plankton, insects, insect larvae, mollusks, crustaceans, fish, fruits, grains, rice. Most species are monogamous and if they lose a partner seem to mourn. Males are larger and heavier than females. The chicks are well developed when they hatch and can walk almost immediately.
The order
Anseriformes has 3 familes: Anatidae, Anhimidae, Anseranatidae. Family Anatidae is comprised of the ducks, swans, and geese which amounts to about 160 species. Family
Anhimidae is made up of 3 screamer species while family
Anseranatidae has only one species, the magpie goose. Since these latter two families contain so few species, it seems appropriate to consider the entire order in this series of articles.
Anatidae
The Anatidae family has the following subfamiles:
Anatinae: dabbling ducks and
teals
Anserinae: geese, swans
Aythyinae: diving ducks
Dendrocygninae: whistling ducks
Merginae: sea-ducks
Oxyurinae: stiff-tailed ducks
Plectropterinae: spur-winged goose
Stictonettinae: freckled duck
Tadorninae: shelducks, shelgeese
Whistling Ducks
The whistling-ducks have a loud whistling-like call, which explains their name. They are treated here as having their own Anatidae subfamily - Dendrocygninae. Some place the whistling ducks in their own Dendrocygnidae, but that placement is not accepted by many.
Whistling-ducks have
long legs and necks, and are very gregarious, flying to and from night-time roosts in large flocks. Both sexes have the same plumage, thus they are not truly dimorphic. However, the male whistling duck average larger than the female. Whistling ducks usually have black on their under-wings. They live mainly near freshwater, but some can be found at saline estuaries and mangroves. Their preferred foraging methods in the water are wading or diving, but dabbling occurs too. Whistling ducks are mainly vegetarian eating aquatic vegetation, grasses, rice. Some do eat small fish, frogs, mollusks, crustaceans, and worms. Nests are constructed in a variety of places depending on the species: hollow trees, unused tree-nests of other species, wetlands, and fields. Since many do nest in trees and most roost in trees, the whistling-ducks have also been called tree-ducks, but that terminogy seems to be falling into disuse. They live in temperate or tropical regions. Most of the species do not migrate, but do move during dry spells.
Lesser Whistling Duck Image by Hari_Patibanda
Genus Dendrocygna
Duck, Black-bellied Whistling- Dendrocygna autumnalis
Image by:
1,
2, 3)
Dick -
Sylvan
Heights 4) Alan D. Wilson
Duck, Fulvous Whistling- Dendrocygna bicolor
Image by: 1)
David_Alvarez_Lopez 2)
Peter_Potrowl 3)
Felix_Uribe
Duck, Lesser Whistling- Dendrocygna javanica
Image by: 1)
Thimindu - Sri Lanka 2)
Fiorellino - Walsrode Bird Park, Germany
3) Dick Daniels -
Sylvan Heights
4)
Gaurika Wijeratne - Sri Lanka
Duck, Plumed Whistling- Dendrocygna eytoni
Image by: 1)
Arthur Chapman - Queensland 2)
Helen - Perth 3)
Glen Fergus - Queensland 4) J
J Harrison - New South Wales
Duck,_Spotted_Whistling- Dendrocygna guttata
Image by: 1)
Tony_Morris 2, 3) Dick Daniels -
Sylvan Heights 4)
Aviceda - Queensland
Duck,
Wandering Whistling- Dendrocygna arcuata
Image by: 1)
Jim_Bendon 2) Jerry Oldenettel - Papua New Guinea
3) Brian Gratwicke 4)
JJ_Harrison
Duck, West Indian Whistling- Dendrocygna arborea
Image by:
1,
2, 3, 4) Dick -
Sylvan Heights
Duck, White-faced Whistling-
Dendrocygna viduata
1)
Bernard_Dupont - South Africa
2. 3) Dick -
Birds of Eden, South Africa 4)
Dick Daniels -
Sylvan Heights
Genus Thalassornis - 1 species
It is not clear what the nearest relative is of the White-backed Duck, perhaps the whistling-ducks. They do have a call similar to whistling-ducks.
Duck, White-backed Thalassornis leuconotus
Image by:
1, 2, 3) Dick Daniels-
Sylvan Heights 4)
Dick - San Diego Zoo