Showing posts with label Bucephela albeola. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bucephela albeola. Show all posts

Monday, January 13, 2025

Winter Ducks

 

I visited Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge this week, to look for winter ducks. It was windy, cold, and lovely. Click to enlarge.

There were lots of ducks. I saw norther shovelers.

Pintails.

Buffleheads.  

A male bufflehead with some food he caught dangling from his beak.

Ruddy ducks!

The two pictured above gave me pause because they were swimming together, and seemed at first to be a couple. They turned out to be two different species. In front, a female bufflehead. In back, an immature male hooded merganser. Tricky!
It was worth the trip for beautiful scenery and abundant interesting ducks. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge has an 8-mile one-way wildlife drive. Click on this sentence to visit the refuge website for information and directions. It's a nice place to visit, even in the cold. Stay in your car or wear your warmest coat.

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Bush Terminal Park

Tired of being kept indoors by the cold, I ventured out yesterday to look at this new Brooklyn park. It was pretty darned cold, about 25 F, and I didn't stay long. Click here for information about and directions to the park. Click here for a great place to have lunch while you are there. 
The park is surrounded by industrial waterfront buildings from an earlier age.  Click to enlarge the photos. 
In the park, a flock of cold-looking ring-billed gulls, Larus delawarensis, were standing on the ice. 
More cold-looking gulls hunkered down on the rocks. 
The rocks by the shore were icy. 
A few Canada geese, Branta canadensis, were walking through the dry grass. 
A pair of American wigeons (Anas penelope) swam by. The male is  on the left and the female on the right. 
A few rafts of bufflehead ducks (Bucephala albeola) swam offshore. 
One of the buffleheads caught an arthropod snack! 
Closer! 

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Buffleheads

     Saturday was the last day of winter. It seems fitting that there were winter ducks in the East River -- some red-breasted mergansers and a pair of bufflehead ducks. The buffleheads were far from shore but their distinctive patterns make them easy to recognize from a distance.
The male bufflehead has a white body, black back, and a large dark iridescent head with a triangular patch behind each eye. (The bufflehead's genus, Bucephala, is from words that mean ox and head, referring to the big-headed look.)



The female bufflehead is mostly dark above, mostly grayish underneath, and lighter on the breast. A large oval white patch on the side of the face and a little patch of white near the back of the wings are usually visible from a distance. 
  
     When male and females of a species look different like this, they are called sexually dimorphic (di=two, morph=shape). Male and female buffleheads are about a foot long and both have small gray bills.

     Buffleheads, Bucephela albeola,  spend the winter throughout the United States. They migrate north to breed. The pair pictured here will probably find a nice lake in Canada and raise a family there. Somewhat unexpectedly, they make their nests in trees. And, even stranger, they almost always make them in holes excavated by woodpeckers in previous nesting seasons.

     Don't be surprised if a bufflehead you are watching disappears before your eyes. Buffleheads dive under water to find aquatic plants and insects, fish eggs, mollusks, and crustaceans. Whereas mallards and many other familiar ducks stay on the surface and tip over with their heads under water and their feet n the air, buffleheads go completely under the surface and can come up surprisingly far away.

One minute the bufflehead is rearing up and flapping his wings....






And the next minute there is nothing but a disappearing tail and a splash...