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Northern Pintail_Burnaby Lake January Beauty *

Northern Pintail

 

Anas acuta

 

This beautiful dabbling duck ranges over more of the earth then any other waterfowl.

 

Appearance

 

The northern pintail is a medium-sized dabbling duck with a slim profile, long narrow neck and pointed tail.

Males have a chocolate brown head, white foreneck, blue-grey bill with black stripe and a long “pin” tail. Wings are grey with an iridescent green patch.

Females are mottled brown and have blue bills with dark spots or mottling.

Breeding

 

Females nest in open areas typically on the ground in low or sparse vegetation and cropland stubble. Pintails tend to locate their nests farther from water than other ducks.

Hens lay one egg a day for an average clutch size of 7-9 eggs. She incubates the eggs for 22-24 days and leads the young to water within 24 hours of their hatching.

Some pintails renest after their initial nests are destroyed but few renest more than twice.

Ducklings feed without assistance and reach flight stage at 46-57 days.

Habitat: Shallow, fast-warming seasonal or permanent wetlands and prairie.

 

Range: Pintails breed from Alaska and the Canadian Arctic south to the Prairie Pothole region of southern Canada and the northern Great Plains of the United States. Pintails winter along the Pacific and Atlantic coasts from SE Alaska and SE Massachusetts south to Mexico and Central America

 

Diet: Pintails dabble or “tip up” to feed on moist-soil and aquatic plant seeds, pond weeds, and aquatic invertebrates. They also feed on grains such as rice, wheat, corn and barley.

 

Status and Conservation Issues

 

Pintail numbers have declined dramatically over the last two decades. In 2002, their population tied the previous record low of 1.8 million birds.

The ultimate cause of their decline is the loss of grassland Habitat. More specifically, reduced nesting success on prairie breeding grounds is suspected to be responsible for low pintail populations.

Decreased nest success may be the result of 1) increased nest predation due to changes in landscape composition, and 2) changes in land use/cropping practices that have resulted in nest loss to agricultural practices.

DUC’s Pintail Intiative aims to conserve Habitat for these beautiful but declining birds.

Interesting Facts

 

The oldest male pintail recorded in the wild was 21 years and 4 months old. The bird was banded in California and recovered in Idaho.

A pintail skeleton was found at 16,400 feet on the Khumbu Glacier during the 1952 expedition to Mt. Everest.

 

 

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Uploaded on January 22, 2015
Taken on January 14, 2015