BirdNote Links
BirdNote Archives

|
American Wigeon Transcript-1398
BirdNote®
American Wigeon, Feathered Lawnmower
Written by Dennis Paulson
This is BirdNote!
[American Wigeon calls, preferably a flock]
These rubber-ducky sounds come from a flock of American Wigeons, trim brown ducks with pale blue bills and big white wing-patches. Their squeaky whistles mark their presence. [American Wigeon call]
Wigeons are grazers, rather than filtering food through serrated bills like other dabbling ducks. Their bill is narrow, with a pointed tip like that of a goose. When feeding on water plants, a wigeon grabs a leaf and rips it off with its strong bill, rather than using the straining apparatus typical of dabbling ducks. [American Wigeon call]
Wigeons’ great fondness for grass brings flocks of them to graze on lawns adjacent to city lakes. The birds become tamer through the winter, and you can get close enough to see how they cut blades of grass—like feathered lawnmowers.
A special treat for experienced birdwatchers is to spot a Eurasian Wigeon grazing alongside the others. Look carefully through the whole flock for a duck with a reddish head and gray body, and you just might find one.
But experienced or not, it’s easy to learn more about American Wigeons on our website, BirdNote.org. Or take a field trip with your local Audubon, and see one for yourself. [American Wigeon call]
For BirdNote, I’m Frank Corrado.
###
Bird audio provided by The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. American Wigeon call recorded by A.A. Allen. Eurasian Wigeon call recorded by M.P. McChesney
Producer: John Kessler
Executive Producer: Chris Peterson
© 2007 Tune In to Nature.org Revised for Nov. 2009
ID# 112807AMWIKPLU
|
|