Mystery Bird: Ring-necked Duck, Aythya collaris

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[Mystery bird] Ring-necked Duck, Aythya collaris, photographed at Hermann Park, Houston, Texas. [I will identify this bird for you tomorrow]

Image: Joseph Kennedy, 11 March 2008 [larger view].

Nikon D200, Kowa 883 telescope TSN-PZ camera eyepiece 1/200s f/8.0 at 500.0mm iso400.

Please name at least one field mark that supports your identification.

Rick Wright, Managing Director of WINGS Birding Tours Worldwide, writes:

This photo should fill you with a flush of accomplishment: rather than running to the field guide, you just looked at the tail, didn't you, and immediately figured out that this was a female Ring-necked Duck.

The trick with brown ducks is that structurally they almost always closely resemble the bright males. Compare this brown Ring-neck with the fine black-and-silver drake from an earlier quiz [GrrlScientist comment: oops! I haven't shown you that duck yet, sorry], and you'll see that they share the long, cocked tail, the vertical nape, the steep forehead, and the slightly undersized bill; she may be ever so slightly less extravagant in those structural features, but they are still readily discernible, making this one of those birds you can identify at half a mile from a speeding car.

And in a view like this, we can use a few of the old "field marks" to confirm our analysis: the back is blackish, and the border between the back and the rather cold-colored sides is lavishly curved. The secondaries are dull silver. The face is paler than the crown, and there is a neat eye ring with a bridle mark trailing off behind. And the bill has a narrow white subterminal band behind the broad blackish tip.

But all you really needed was the length of the tail and the angle of the nape. Try it -- it works.

Review all mystery birds to date.

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A duck-billed quackapus?

Ring-necked Duck, female.

White ring on bill, white plumage at base of bill, eye-ring that has a hint of a "tail" at the rear of the eye. Clincher is the gray cheeks (would be brown on any other Aythya species).

By Albatorssity (not verified) on 10 Nov 2008 #permalink

details, details. was probably spray-painted in a pathetic attempt to mislead. besides, it's clearly rubber or plastic. with a few feathers glued on as part of the deception.

I'd go with R-N duck also. Maybe Scaup but head is not flat so RN.