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Muscovy Duck (Cairina moschata) - Wiki
Subject: Muscovy Duck (Cairina moschata) - Wiki
Muscovy Duck (Cairina moschata)-1.jpg
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Muscovy Duck (Cairina moschata) - Wiki


Muscovy Duck
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[Photo] Muscovy Duck at a St Albans park, 12 November 2003. The original can be found at http://arglist.com/photos/

The Muscovy Duck, Cairina moschata is a large duck which is native to Mexico, Central and South America. A small wild population reaches into the lower Rio Grande River basin in Texas. There also is a significant feral population in southern Florida and southern Texas.

The wild Muscovy Duck is all-dark apart from the white in the wings, with long talons on its feet and a wide flat tail. The male is 86 cm long and weighs 3 kg, much larger than the 64 cm long, 1.3 kg female. His most distinctive features are a bare red face with a pronounced caruncle at the base of the bill and a low erectile crest of feathers. The drake has a dry hissing call, and the hen a quiet trilling coo.

Behaviour
This non-migratory species normally inhabits forested swamps, lakes and streams, and often roosts in trees at night.

This species, like the Mallard, does not form stable pairs, and, again like that species, forced sexual intercourse can occur in feral populations. The hen lays a clutch of 8-10 white eggs, usually in a tree hole or hollow, which are incubated for 35 days.

The Muscovy Duck has benefited from nest boxes in Mexico, but is somewhat uncommon in much of the east of its range due to excessive hunting.

Muscovy ducks can breed near urban and suburban lakes and on farms, nesting in tree cavities or on the ground, under shrubs in yards, on condominium balconies or under roof overhangs.

Diet
The Muscovy Duck's diet consists of plant material obtained by grazing or dabbling in shallow water, with some small vertebrates and insects.

Sequencing
It was formerly placed into the paraphyletic "perching duck" assemblage, but subsequently moved to the Anatinae subfamily of dabbling ducks. Analysis of the mtDNA sequences of the cytochrome b and NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 genes (Johnson & Sorenson, 1999), however, indicates that it might be closer to the genus Aix and better placed in the shelduck subfamily Tadorninae; in addition, the other species of Cairina, the rare White-winged Wood Duck, seems to belong into a distinct genus.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscovy_Duck
The text in this page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article shown in above URL. It is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

Comments
ian halbert
i have just been out with my dog,i went to a pond in prescot merseyside when i noticed this big
black & white duck.so when i got home i thought i would look it up. the picture that i found was this one ,o by the way i have only seen it about 50 mins ago ,its just looking around
taking in every thing , i was about 8 foot from it .i was not atall worried about the dog being
close by ,i wonder if it has escaped or just taking a rest.
many thanks, yours confused Ian Halbert
sue salisbury
I live in upstate NY and live just off the West Canada Creek. I was heading to work one day when I spotted these two ducks which I now know are muscovy ducks and thought they were cute. One day I found that there were only one .... dont know what happened to the other one. It seemed like it was pretty tame so I decided it must be a domestic duck. To make a long story short I have been going down to the creek to feed this duck everyday. I've noticed that it hardly ever gets in the water only to get from one place to another and stays on a log all day. It now comes to me everytime I go to him. I have obtained a net from the humane society and plan on catching it tomorrow and the lady there has other ducks and a pond where I thought it would be happy.

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