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Hooded
Merganser
A
quiet, secretive duck, the Hooded Merganser is
the smallest of the North American mergansers,
about the same size as the Wood Duck.
Hooded Mergansers are sexually dimorphic. Males
are a striking combination of black, white, and
reddish brown. The head, neck, and back are
black, the rump is gray, and the tail is dark,
grayish brown. The chest, breast, and belly are
white, and there are two irregular black marks on
the sides of the breast. The sides and flanks are
tawny or reddish brown. The males most
distinguishing physical characteristic is his
crest, which when fully erect, reveals a stunning
white patch bordered by black. When the crest is
down, there is a white stripe extending backwards
from the eye.
Females and immature males look alike. They are
dark, grayish brown or blackish brown. The neck,
chest, sides, and flanks are gray. The head is
brown. The females crest is brown, tinged
with cinnamon, and sometimes white at its tip.
The crest of the immature male is similar to, but
smaller than that of the female. Not all immature
males have a crest.
Hooded Mergansers are the only merganser that
lives (breeds and winters) exclusively in North
America. In the past, they were found throughout
the continent, including mountainous areas,
wherever suitable habitats existed. Today, they
are most common in the Great Lakes region and
eastern Canada but are also found in the Pacific
Northwest.
Hooded Merganser Range Map
The habitat preferences of
Hooded Mergansers are very similar to those of
Wood Ducks. They like quiet, shallow, clear-water
pools that have sandy or cobblestoned bottoms.
They prefer ponds that are near or surrounded by
deciduous woods: river bottomlands, small forest
pools, millponds, swamps, and beaver ponds.
Unlike Wood Ducks, Hooded Mergansers have a
difficult time finding food in turbulent water,
so calm, clear water is highest on their list of
habitat requirements. Hooded Mergansers are not
likely to nest on large lakes.
Information on the breeding ecology of Hooded
Mergansers is scarce, despite its use of nest boxes. Overhunting and logging
at the turn of the century depressed population
numbers, but nest-box programs in states such as
Missouri, Maine, Iowa, and Oregon have helped
increase local populations. This species also
seems to be particularly sensitive to pesticides
and acid precipitation.
True to its scientific name, which translates to
"hooded diver," Hooded Mergansers are
experts at diving and foraging underwater. Their
legs are situated farther back on the body than
on dabbling ducks, such as Mallards. This makes
mergansers awkward on land but expert divers and
swimmers. They also have eyes well adapted to
seeing underwater.
The diet of Hooded Mergansers is the most diverse
of the mergansers. They dine on small fish,
frogs, tadpoles, and invertebrates such as
aquatic insects, snails and other mollusks, and
small crustaceans. Hooded Mergansers may also eat
seeds and aquatic plants.
The information on territoriality and pair
formation in this species is scarce. The timing
and duration of pair formation is uncertain. Some
birds return to the breeding ground together as
mated pairs; others participate in courtship and
mating rituals after arriving.
The date mergansers arrive on their breeding
grounds and begin to breed depends on region and
latitude. Hooded Mergansers are early migrants,
and many individuals arrive just days after the
ice breaks. Birds tend to arrive in February in
Missouri, late March in the Great Lakes region,
and mid-to-late April in British Columbia. Female
Hooded Mergansers show strong philopatry,
returning to the same breeding area, but not
necessarily the same nest site, as in previous
years. Nesting begins as early as February and
early March in the lower latitudes and milder
regions of the mergansers range. Birds
breeding at higher latitudes begin to nest from
early April to early May.
Hooded Mergansers are monogamous, and they do not
breed until their second year. Yearling males,
nevertheless, may perform some courtship displays
and form loose pair bonds.
Courtship groups consist of one to two females
and several males. Males perform courtship
rituals and displays, including crest-raising,
head-shaking, head-throws, and head-pumping.
Although normally silent, males make several
vocalizations during some courtship displays. The
most common is a rolling, frog-like call that is
given immediately after a male performs a
head-throw display. Males also may make short
display flights. If anything, females perform
only head-pumping displays.
Hooded Mergansers nest 10 to 20 ft off the ground
in hollow trees, hollow stumps, other natural
cavities, and nest boxes. They prefer to nest
near water but have been known to nest up to one
mile from water. The female chooses the nest
site. She does not add nesting material, instead
forming a shallow cup from the material already
present in the cavity. The cup is lined with down
feathers plucked from the females belly,
although some females may wait to lay their down
after egg laying has begun.
Hooded Mergansers compete strongly for nest sites
with other Hooded Mergansers and with other
species such as Wood Ducks, Common Goldeneyes,
and Common Mergansers. In fact, it is common to
find the eggs of two species in one nest. Nest
boxes placed at great distances from each
other can help alleviate the problem of nest-site
competition.
Nest boxes should be placed close to or over
water. Hooded Mergansers nest in the same type of
nest box used by Wood Ducks. One nest-box study
investigating nest-site preferences of Hooded
Mergansers and Wood Ducks found that proximity to
water was the most important nest-site feature to
Hooded Mergansers. They chose boxes that were
closest to water. Wood Ducks, on the other hand,
had no significant preference for boxes near
water. Hooded Mergansers also prefer nest boxes
that have been used in previous years and boxes
that contain wood chips.
Females lay one egg every other day, but some may
lay the first three eggs of the clutch on
successive days and the remaining eggs on
alternate days. Eggs are smooth, glossy, white,
and almost spherical. The average clutch size is
10 eggs, but clutches can contain as few as 5 and
as many as 13. Clutch size in this species is
correlated to the age of the female and time of
the breeding season; in other words, clutches
laid by older females and clutches laid earlier
in the season tend to be larger.
The eggs are covered with a layer of down that is
placed in the nest before egg-laying, during
egg-laying, or after the clutch is completed.
During this time, if the female is disturbed
before she has finished lining her nest with down
feathers or laying her clutch, she will abandon
the nest.
The incubation period is 32 to 33 days. Once the
female begins to incubate, the male leaves the
nest site and is gone for the remainder of the
breeding season. If the female is disturbed
toward the end of the incubation period or when
she has ducklings, she will perform a
"broken wing" distraction display.
Hatching in Hooded Mergansers is highly
synchronous; the eggs usually hatch within four
hours of each other. The ducklings are precocialcovered
in down, mobile, and able to feed themselves.
They remain in the nest for 24 hours where they
are brooded by the female. The female then leaves
the cavity, calls to her young using a soft,
guttural vocalization, and leads her brood to a
nearby pond that is rich in invertebrates and
small fish. The young are able to dive, but first
dives are shallow and brief.
The female alone cares for the ducklings. After
70 days, the young can fly, and the female leaves
them and prepares for fall migration.
Hooded Mergansers have one brood per season.
Females rarely lay replacement clutches. If a
nest fails early in incubation, when the male is
usually still present, a female may renest. If
the male has already left the breeding area when
a nest fails, the females chance to breed
for the year is gone.
Hooded Mergansers migrate in late fall, and they
migrate singly, in pairs, or in small flocks.
They migrate short to intermediate distances.
Most individuals in the northern part of the
breeding range move to the southern and coastal
regions of the continent, wintering mainly on
freshwater. Some winter as far north as the ice
permits. Birds breeding in mild climates may stay
and reside throughout the winter.
There is little information on dispersal in this
species. Yearling females, although not old
enough to breed, seem to return to the general
area as their natal nest cavity but not to the
same nest site. Older females, who have bred in
previous years, show extreme site fidelity, often
returning to the same nest box as the year
before.
Coveside
Bird House Features

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