Birdist Rule #106: Go Find Yourself a Bufflehead

Ready to move on from Mallards? Start with these adorable little ducks.

Ducks don鈥檛 get nearly enough credit from non-birders. I鈥檝e found that the unenlightened opinion of ducks is that they鈥檙e kind of lame, slowly swimming around some urban pond waiting for an old lady to toss them some free bread. They can鈥檛 even put on a of pants, for goodness鈥 sake.

Of course, this isn鈥檛 even close to true.听Ducks make up a varied and decidedly un-boring family of birds. Some are strikingly colored, like our and . Some are amazing hunters, like , which can swim underwater for long periods and snatch fish with their serrated bills. There are ducks听everywhere around the world where there鈥檚 water, from fast-moving to the open ocean in the .

Thankfully, it鈥檚 not difficult to get out there and find some ducks different from your typical Mallards. In fact, winter is the best season to go meet some new species, and a听great place to start is with one of our most endearing and adorable ducks, the .

There鈥檚 a lot to love here.

Let鈥檚 start with their size. Buffleheads are tiny. Among the world鈥檚 smallest species of duck, they鈥檙e about a third the weight of a Mallard.听In fact, they鈥檙e so tiny that most of their听bodies听seem听to be made up of their听big puffy heads.

They鈥檙e named after those big heads, of course. 鈥淏uffle鈥 was an old word meaning 鈥渂uffalo,鈥 and early observers apparently drew a comparison between this duck鈥檚 noggin and that of the massive grazer. It wasn鈥檛 a friendly comparison either; to call someone 鈥渂uffle-headed鈥 in the 1600s was to say they were I don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 a connection between that usage and the duck, though, because how could you insult these little guys?

Anyway, despite their size,听Buffleheads are easy to identify, even from a good distance away. From afar, drake (male) ducks appear听a spiffy black听and听white. But if you get close enough, you鈥檒l see that the head of a drake Bufflehead is actually an iridescent purple-green. Still,听it looks black most of the time.听When they鈥檙e swimming, look for a strong white line against the water, a black back and face, and a听large white patch that extends back from their eye, making their head look kind of like a big, black-and-white Pac-Man. To me, anyway.

Females Buffleheads, though not quite as colorful, are also easy to identify. They鈥檙e brown all over, with a bright white patch on their cheeks. In flight, notice the diminutive size of these birds. Look for the bright white patches on the heads of both genders, and the bold white back and wing stripes on the males.
Buffleheads aren鈥檛 typically found in big flocks like some other ducks, except when they鈥檙e molting in summer or migrating in the fall. So in the winter, check for small groups of males and females on pretty much any patch of water.听When their听breeding grounds turn too cold,听Buffleheads听descend to lower elevations and wait out the winter all across the U.S., from the Great Lakes all the way down into Mexico.

In summer, you probably won鈥檛 see a Bufflehead听unless you live in, like, Yellowstone National Park, the Sierra Mountains, a few other western spots, and the plains of Canada and Alaska. Even if you鈥檙e in their breeding range, don鈥檛 look for Bufflehead nests in the reeds or along the lakeshore; you need to look up. Like Wood Ducks and a few other duck species,听Buffleheads nest in tree cavities听most frequently听made by Northern Flickers and other large woodpeckers.

Nesting in trees is a great strategy for ducks听because it keeps听eggs safe from terrestrial听predators such as听foxes. It does pose a small problem for the fledgling chicks, however.听They still can't fly yet, so their first trip听from the nest is a drop听anywhere from nine听to 88 feet to the ground below.听How do they do it?听
, of course! They bounce around a bit when they land, but they are usually unhurt. Pretty exciting way to start life, if you ask me.

You won鈥檛 find Buffleheads听in trees in the听winter, though. Instead, look on any bit of shallow, open water. They can be found in urban ponds with Mallards and other more common ducks (I see Buffleheads regularly at near the White House here in Washington, D.C.), or in open lakes and ocean bays.听

If at first you don鈥檛 see anything, keep looking for a few minutes鈥攖he birds might be underwater. Buffleheads are divers听and spend much of their time scavenging for little mollusks and crustaceans before popping back onto the surface like听.

Drake Buffleheads also begin their听听in the winter, accelerating as spring arrives. Males will compete with one another in odd head-bopping maneuvers, coupled with a sort of grating, chattering noise and short, rowing flights across the surface of the water. It's all听meant to impress females by showing their fancy plumage and bright pink feet. Look, maybe it鈥檚 not the sexiest thing for you and me, but female Buffleheads love it.

There you have it, your first cool, non-Mallard duck is waiting right now on a nearby lake for you to go identify. So get out there this听winter and find听one.听You鈥檇 be a total buffle-head not to. (Sorry, I couldn't resist.)听