Melanitta nigra
Common Scoter
The Common Scoter is a medium-sized sea duck with a distinctive appearance. Males are entirely black with a bulbous base to their bill, which features a yellow-orange patch. Their eyes are dark, and they have a rounded head profile.
Females are predominantly dark brown with paler cheeks and throat. Juveniles resemble females but may have more mottled plumage.
Length
43cm to 54cm
Wingspan
79cm to 90cm
Weight
800g to 1.5kg
Woodland
Garden
Wetland
Coastal
Urban
Farmland
Grassland
Desert
Tundra
Rainforest
Mountain
Savanna
Common Scoters inhabit coastal marine environments, preferring shallow waters with sandy or muddy bottoms. They breed in freshwater lakes and pools in Arctic tundra and taiga regions across northern Europe and Asia.
During winter, they migrate to temperate coastal areas. In the UK, large numbers can be found along the east coast of England and Scotland, as well as in the Irish Sea and off the coast of Wales.
Sea level to 100 meters
Temperate, Subarctic
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The Common Scoter's diet consists primarily of molluscs, particularly mussels and cockles. They also consume crustaceans, small fish, and aquatic insects. These ducks use their strong bills to pry open shellfish and crush their shells underwater.
Common Scoters are highly social, often forming large flocks on the water. They are excellent divers, using their wings to propel themselves underwater in search of food.
During courtship, males perform elaborate displays, including head-bobbing and short flights across the water's surface.
Common Scoters form pairs on wintering grounds before migrating to breeding areas. They typically breed from May to August, depending on the latitude of their nesting site.
Females construct nests on the ground, often hidden in dense vegetation near water. The nest is a shallow depression lined with plant material and down. They lay 6-9 olive-buff coloured eggs.
Incubation lasts about 30 days, carried out solely by the female. Ducklings are precocial and can swim and feed themselves shortly after hatching, but remain with the female for protection for several weeks.
years
The Common Scoter typically lives for 10 to 15 years.
Like all birds, lifespan can be affected by factors including predation, habitat quality, disease, and access to food sources.
While listed as Least Concern globally, Common Scoter populations are declining in some areas due to habitat loss, oil spills, and bycatch in fishing nets. Conservation efforts focus on protecting key wintering and breeding sites and reducing marine pollution.
Global Population Estimate
1,600,000 individuals [2]
Global Population Trend
Trend data may be uncertain or fluctuating
Black Scoter
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website: BirdLife International. 2018. Melanitta nigra. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018: e.T22724879A132257623.
View sourcereport, 2006: Delany and Scott