The 'Common Shelduck' (''Tadorna tadorna'') is a widespread and common duck of the Genus
Tadorna.
Fossil bones from
Dorkovo (
Bulgaria) described as ''Balcanas pliocaenica'' may actually belong to this species. More likely, they are an extinct species of ''
Tadorna'' (if not a distinct genus) due to their
Early Pliocene age; the present species is not unequivocally attested from the fossil record until some 2-3 million years later (
Late Pliocene/
Early Pleistocene.
Description
The gooselike Common Shelduck is a striking bird with its red bill, white and chestnut body, dark green head and neck. Sexes are similar, but the female is duller. The male has a swollen red bill knob in the breeding season.
Distribution
This is a
bird which breeds in temperate
Eurasia. Most populations
migrate to subtropical areas in winter, but this species is largely resident in westernmost
Europe, apart from movements to favoured moulting grounds, such as the
Wadden Sea on the north
German coast.
The Common Shelduck is common around the coastline of
Great Britain (where it is simply known as Shelduck), where it frequents salt marshes and estuaries.
Behaviour and Habitat
Moulting flocks can be very large (100,000 on the Wadden Sea), since most pairs leave their partially grown young in a crèche with just one or two adults.
This species is mainly associated with lakes and rivers in open country, breeding in
rabbit burrows, tree holes, haystacks or similar. In winter it is common on suitable estuaries and tidal mudflats as well.
The call is a loud honk.
This bird is one of the species to which the ''Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds'' (
AEWA) applies.
References
★ Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
External links
★
RSPB A to Z of UK Birds
★
Common Shelduck videos on the Internet Bird Collection