The 'Pintail' or 'Northern Pintail' (''Anas acuta'') is a common and widespread
duck which breeds in the northern areas of
Europe and
Asia and across most of
Canada,
Alaska and the mid-western
United States.
This
dabbling duck is strongly
migratory and winters further south than its breeding range, as far as the equator. It is highly gregarious outside the breeding season and forms large mixed flocks with other ducks. In the main
Hawaiian Islands, a few hundred ''Koloa mapu'' winter in shallow
wetlands and flooded agricultural habitats. In
Kenya they frequent permanent waters, wintering in large numbers on the
Rift Valley lakes and in the C and W highlands.
The breeding male is unmistakable. It has a pale grey body, white breast and lateral neck stripe, and dark brown head. The vent region is buff and black, and it has the long pointed tail that gives the species its
English and scientific names. The female is light brown with a whiter throat, and its pointed tail is shorter, but it is still easily identified by its shape, long neck, and long all grey bill. In non-breeding (eclipse) plumage, the drake Pintail looks more like the female. The species is fairly large for a duck, but is light for its size; males range from 65 to 75 cm in length, while females are smaller at 50 to 55 cm.
The Northern Pintails is a bird of open wetlands, such as wet grassland or tundra, and feeds by dabbling for plant food mainly in the evening or at night. During the nesting season, this bird also eats aquatic
insects,
mollusks and
crustaceans. It sometimes feeds on grasses and seeds in fields. The nest is a shallow scrape on the ground lined with plant material and down, in a dry location that may be fairly far from water.
Courtship often includes aerial pursuit of a single female by several males.
The male has a
Teal-like whistle, whereas the female has a
Mallard-like quack.
The closely related
Eaton's Pintail was once considered to be island races of this species: ''A. eatoni eatoni'' ('Kerguelen Island Pintail'), of
Kerguelen Island, and ''A. e. drygalskyi'' ('Crozet Pintail'), of
Crozet Island. In both, the males do not develop the full breeding plumage.
This is a scarce breeding species in
Great Britain, where it breeds at a few scattered sites. Favourite areas are the
Scottish Highlands,
Galloway,
East Anglia and
Kent. It is more common as a winter visitor, when birds from
Siberia winter in
England and
Wales
Threats to the Northern Pintail include avian disease and loss of wetland habitat to
development,
pollution, and
invasive plants.
The Northern Pintail is one of the species to which the ''Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds'' (
AEWA) applies.
Its earlier scientific name was ''Dafila acuta''.
See also
★
White-cheeked Pintail
★
Eaton's Pintail
References and external links
★ Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
★
Northern Pintail species description from Cornell Lab of Ornithology
★
RSPB A to Z of UK Birds Page
★
Northern Pintail Information and Photos from South Dakota Birds and Birding
★
Massachusetts Breeding Bird Atlas
★
Northern Pintail videos on the Internet Bird Collection