Oil Spill Wildlife Spotlight: Ducks


Most of the world's mottled duck (above) population lives along the Gulf Coast year round (Photo: Bill Stripling, courtesy of 爆料公社)
Luckily many duck species that spend the winter months along the Gulf Coast had already left the area when the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded. But one non-migratory species lives and breeds pretty darn close to the heart of the spill: the mottled duck
 
This species, a look-alike of the American black duck and often confused with the female mallard, winters and breeds along the Gulf Coast and is one of the few ducks that doesn鈥檛 move north, says bird expert Kenn Kaufman. Most of the mottled ducks in the world live along the edge of Louisiana and Texas, with smaller groups in Florida and as far south as Mexico. That makes them 鈥渆specially vulnerable,鈥 Kaufman says. 鈥淭he mottled duck doesn鈥檛 have major populations elsewhere鈥攐nly a small percentage of its population nests on the southern Great Plains and along the southern Atlantic coast.鈥
 
Also, we鈥檙e smack-dab in the middle of their breeding season. A typical mottled duck clutch can contain up to a dozen eggs, with a month-long incubation period that鈥檚 likely ending right about now鈥攋ust as the oil is making its way toward the shore. The ducklings stick to the nest for just 24 hours after hatching, then head to the water behind mom to seek out food.
 
Mottled ducks typically feed in freshwater, not saltwater marshes. But no one really knows where the oil will end up, and according to Kaufman, these ducks sometimes move into areas where salt- and freshwater commingle. 鈥淭hey

Redhead (Photo by Shanth, Flickr Creative Commons)

could easily pick up oil contamination there,鈥 he says, adding, 鈥淚f coastal marshes along the Gulf are extensively degraded, this species will definitely feel the effects.鈥

 
Sadly, that鈥檚 the short-term picture of oil and ducks. Though the spill may soon be plugged, its effects could endanger the region and these species for months, if not years. That means other ducks鈥攖he lesser scaup and the redhead, for example鈥攎ay feel the heat when they return to the area next fall. 鈥淭he redhead could be especially vulnerable if the oil contaminates the Texas coast,鈥 Kaufman says, 鈥渟ince a high percentage of the world鈥檚 redhead population winters in the Laguna Madre of south Texas.鈥
 
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