Anas platyrhynchos
The Mallard is a medium-sized duck with a distinctive appearance. Males have a glossy green head, narrow white collar, chestnut-brown chest, and grayish body. Their wings feature a blue speculum bordered by white.
Females are mottled brown with an orange-brown bill, often with dark markings. Both sexes have orange legs and feet. During the late summer molt, males resemble females but retain their yellow bill.
Juvenile Mallards look very similar to adult females, although they do not have the deep blue wing panel. Very young birds have dark bills, but they soon develop the characteristic yellow or orange bills of the adults.
Length
50cm to 65cm
Wingspan
81cm to 98cm
Weight
720g to 1.58kg
Woodland
Garden
Wetland
Coastal
Urban
Farmland
Grassland
Desert
Tundra
Rainforest
Mountain
Savanna
Mallards are found across many wetland habitats, including freshwater ponds, lakes, rivers, and marshes. They also thrive in human-modified environments like city parks, agricultural areas, and suburban retention ponds.
This species has a vast distribution across North America, Europe, and Asia. It is a year-round resident in much of its range, including the UK, USA, and southern Canada, with northern populations migrating south for winter.
Sea level to 1,000 meters
Temperate, Subtropical, Subarctic
This map gives you a rough idea of where you might spot a Mallard. The coloured areas show countries where these birds have been seen.
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Share your thoughtsOur bird attributes system rates various aspects of a bird's capabilities on a scale of 0-100, based on data from field observations, scientific studies, and expert knowledge.
Remember, these attributes are relative to other bird species and don't necessarily indicate superiority.
Hover over the icon next to each attribute for more information.
Tap the icon next to each attribute for more information.
Reflects the bird's manoeuvrability, speed, and grace in flight or movement.
Mallards exhibit impressive agility, particularly in flight. They can take off almost vertically from water and achieve speeds up to 88 km/h. Their ability to manoeuvre swiftly in various environments, from wetlands to urban parks, demonstrates their high agility.
Indicates the bird's physical power, often correlating with size and hunting abilities.
While not exceptionally strong compared to larger waterfowl, Mallards possess moderate strength. They can fly long distances during migration and males engage in physical displays during courtship. Their ability to dabble and forage in various water depths also indicates a decent level of strength.
Represents the bird's ability to thrive in various environments or changing conditions.
Mallards are highly adaptable birds. They thrive in a wide range of habitats from natural wetlands to urban parks, and their diet is varied and flexible. Their ability to nest in diverse locations and adjust to human-modified environments showcases their exceptional adaptability.
Measures the bird's territorial behaviour and assertiveness, particularly during breeding seasons.
Mallards are generally not aggressive birds, preferring to live in social groups. However, males may display some aggression during the breeding season when competing for mates. Their moderate score reflects this seasonal variation in behaviour.
Reflects the bird's stamina, often seen in migration patterns or foraging behaviours.
Mallards demonstrate good endurance, particularly during migration for northern populations. Their ability to fly at high speeds for extended periods and their success in colonising diverse habitats across a wide geographical range indicate strong endurance. However, they are not known for extreme long-distance migrations like some other bird species.
Mallards have a varied diet, primarily consisting of plant matter such as seeds, stems, and leaves of aquatic vegetation. They also consume insects, worms, snails, and small fish.
In urban areas, they often supplement their diet with bread and other food provided by humans, though this is not recommended.
Mallards find their food on dry land, the water's surface, and below by tipping their bodies and reaching down to the bottom.
Mallards are highly adaptable and social ducks, often seen in large flocks. They are dabbling ducks, tipping forward in the water to feed on submerged vegetation.
On land, they waddle with a characteristic head-bobbing motion. Mallards are known for their ability to take off almost vertically from water.
The Mallard's vocalizations are distinct and varied. Females produce the familiar loud, repetitive 'decrescendo' 'quack-quack-quack' call, consisting of two to ten rising and then falling quacking notes. This call can be heard over long distances.
Males have a softer, raspy call, often described as a low 'reeb-reeb' sound. During courtship, males also make a high-pitched whistle.
Mallards typically form pairs in the fall and winter months. The breeding season begins in spring, with timing varying by location. Males perform elaborate courtship displays, including head-bobbing and whistling calls.
Females construct nests on the ground near water, often concealed in vegetation. The nest is a shallow depression lined with grass and down. A typical clutch consists of 8-13 pale greenish or bluish-white eggs.
Incubation lasts about 28 days, performed solely by the female. Ducklings are precocial, leaving the nest within 24 hours of hatching. They can fly at 50-60 days old.
While Mallards are not currently of conservation concern due to their large population and wide distribution, they face threats from habitat loss and degradation.
Wetland conservation efforts benefit Mallards and many other waterfowl species. Hunting is regulated to maintain sustainable populations.
Mallards face predation from various animals, including foxes, raccoons, large fish, snapping turtles, birds of prey (such as hawks and owls), and in some areas, alligators.
Mallards include both males and females of a single duck species. Male Mallards are known as drakes, while females are called ducks or hens.
All Mallards are ducks, but not all ducks are Mallards. Riddles aside, the Mallard is just one of over a hundred different duck species. Breeding males are easily identified by their bright yellow bills and green heads, although females are similar to other dabbling ducks.
Male Mallards develop their colorful breeding plumage when they are a few months old. Adult drakes will lose these fancy feathers by June each summer after they have mated, and regrow them by September in time to attract a female before the next breeding season.
Male Mallards do not have green heads between July and August each year. They look similar to females at this time, but birdwatchers can still identify them by their bright yellow bills.
website: BirdLife International. 2019. Anas platyrhynchos (amended version of 2017 assessment). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019: e.T22680186A155457360.
View sourcereport, 2015: Wetlands International
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