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 Northern
Shoveler
In considering the
Northern Shoveler, a common but underappreciated duck,
the obvious starting point is not its brilliant plumage,
nor even its fascinating and unusual social behavior, but
rather its most prominent and highly specialized
adaptation--its prodigious and uniquely-equipped bill.
Northern Shovelers have strikingly elongated bills,
broader toward the tip, with comblike projections along
the lateral edges. Shovelers' bills are adapted for their
preferred mode of feeding--swimming along with bill
lowered into the water, straining out small crustaceans
and other invertebrates. Northern Shovelers are dabbling
ducks (genus Anas), but unlike some other
dabblers, including Mallards and Northern Pintails,
shovelers do not commonly tip their heads and upper
bodies forward into the water.
The preferred breeding habitat of the species is open,
shallow wetlands. In western North America, the species'
breeding range extends from northern Alaska southward and
eastward through Saskatchewan, Alberta, Manitoba, North
Dakota, and Montana, to its southern limits in the
Central Valley of California, northern Nevada,
south-central Utah, and northern New Mexico. Its eastern
breeding range is more limited; it breeds in portions of
southeastern Wisconsin, Michigan, southeast Ontario,
southern Quebec, and very locally in other areas.
Males leave their breeding grounds in late August or
early September, weeks earlier than females and young.
Northern Shovelers winter in various wetland habitats,
including both freshwater and saline marshes, throughout
much of the southern and southwestern United States and
Mexico. Most individuals winter in California, the Gulf
Coast of Louisiana and Texas, and inland marshes in
Mexico; some wintering shovelers may be found as far
north as extreme southern British Columbia and as far
south as the Pacific coast of Costa Rica.
The breeding range of the species also spans from
northern and central Europe, east through Siberia to the
Pacific Coast, and as far south as the Crimea and the
Caucasus Mountains. Eurasian Northern Shovelers winter in
southern Europe, parts of Egypt and sub-Saharan Africa,
eastward through the Middle East across India and
southeast Asia to southern China, Japan, and the
Philippines.
Northern
Shoveler Range Map
Northern Shovelers form pairs on their wintering grounds,
generally in December. Males exhibit elaborate courtship
behavior, including various calls, turns, dips, and wing
flaps. Northern Shovelers are monogamous, and remain
paired longer than other dabbler species. Males behave
territorially during the breeding season, defending their
home ranges and mates from other male shovelers.
Females lay 8 to 12 eggs starting in mid-May. The nest is
a simple scrape lined with down and usually surrounded on
at least three sides by vegetation. New shoveler
hatchlings are feathered, and can walk and swim. They
leave the nest shortly after hatching. Only female
shovelers care for the young.
Northern Shovelers issue a variety of vocalizations.
Females utter short series of loud single quacks with
even pauses at dusk from February throughout the mating
season. They exhibit slightly different quacking patterns
immediately before egg-laying, and when they are flushed
from the nest. In courtship and copulation, males emit
nasal "took" notes; in fall and early
winter, males frequently issue a nasal "paaay."
Northern Shovelers also make a rattling noise, unique
among dabbling ducks, when they take flight.
Description: Northern Shovelers are of
medium size relative to other dabbling ducks. Adult males
measure about 50 cm from bill tip to tail; females are
about 10 percent smaller. For both sexes, the long bill
is the species' most distinguishing feature. Both male
and female Northern Shovelers also have light-blue
patches on their upper-wing coverts; such blue markings
are also characteristic of Cinnamon and Blue-winged teal,
as well as two other shoveler species.
Breeding males have iridescent, dark green heads, black
bills, and yellow eyes. (Male Mallards also have shiny
green heads, but their eyes are dark and their bills
yellow--and modestly proportioned.) The breasts of
breeding male shovelers are pure white, and their flanks
rufous. They show these bright colors from December to
May, whereupon they molt into plainer plumage, with a
dark-brown or blackish head, dusky eye line, dark brown
breast and belly, and light brown flanks. The bills of
nonbreeding adult males are orange at the base and along
the edges, and black on most of the upper mandible.
Females and immature males are mostly brown and gray; the
edges of their body feathers are pale, giving their
plumage a highly textured appearance. Their bills
resemble those of nonbreeding adult males.
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