Hey, birders, it's prime time to find merganser ducks on the Bow - Action News
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Hey, birders, it's prime time to find merganser ducks on the Bow

Phyllis Diller hair. Bold, brilliant colours. They fly low and long, in a single row. Diving ducks give bird watchers a show on the Bow.

Migrating merganser ducks create a natural late autumn spectacle

A male common merganser duck goes for a swim. (Copyright-free photo)

Birders, alert: this a great time to find loon-like diving ducks on the Bow River, naturalist Brian Keating toldHomestretchhost Doug Dirks this week.

Q: Where are the ducks diving?

A:This is prime time to find mergansers, which are loon-like diving ducks that are on our river throughthe city right now.

In fact, twoweeks agowhen I was standing on the Peace Bridge, watching those brown trout do their thing in the water building their beds for laying their eggs I noticed twomergansers were working their way upstream.

They were diving right down below us, so we could see them as they were swimming underwater. It's fascinating, to get a bird's eye view of a diving duck looking straight down throughclear water, seeing how their feet are located so far back on their bodies and how they manoeuvre around.

Although smaller than the common merganser, the hooded merganser is one of three different mergansers that's been sighted recently in southern Alberta. (Copyright free photo)

Q: What do they look like?

A:They've got a long red bill, narrow red bill a serrated bill, if you get close enough to look atwhich readily distinguishes the merganser from all the other ducks.

The legs and feet are also a deep red in colour.

The males are big up to about 1.5 kilograms(3.5 pounds)in size, so they're among the largest ducks. They're quite a bit less stocky than the other oneyou might confuse it with, which is the goldeneye on the river.

When they fly, they look elongated almost like they've been stretchedand they fly in long trailing lines.If there's a numberof them flying together, they'll fly oneafter the other and usually low over the water.

Right now, the males have a beautiful greenish-black crest on their black head, on their upper neck, and below that, a creamy white underside, and they've got black backs, so they're very boldly coloured.

When you see them on the river, you can't mistake them for anything else.

The females have a red tufted head in fact, it looks like they have a Phyllis Diller hairdo. Their hair is swept straight back. Just imagine heading into the wind at high speeds andall the hair going straight back.

The red-breasted merganser is one of three different mergansers that's been sighted recently in Calgary. (Abi Warner Photography)

Q: Why is this a good time to see them?

A:They're migrating through.I suspect a lot of their areas are freezing up with that cold spell we had last week, so they're coming in, and our Bow River is excellent for good fish, and these guys are professional fish catchers.

They don't eat just fish, but they also go after crustaceans.

Also, they're at their greatest number right now. They averageabout 12 eggs per clutch andthey've actually found up to 17 eggs in a nest.

And it's not unusual to see 20 or 30 babies following onefemale, because [their perspective is] as long as that birdlooks like mom,I'm going tohang out with her. I don't care if she's my real mom. The female doesn't feed the babies. She just leads them from onegood feeding place to another.

Onlytwodays after they're born, baby mergansers are already capable of diving.

For the first 12 days of their life, they're after insects andthen they turn onto fish.

Q: Where do they nest?

A:They actually find old woodpecker holes, or natural large cavities in trees so in association with old growth forests.

They're a northern bird. You find them throughout the boreal forest, in those clean lakes up there and even, of course, right here along the Bow River, but because of the rarity of these holes, sometimes they have to nest a long way away from water, and sometimes, up to 30 metres up above the ground.

Q: Is the common merganser the only kind spotted in Calgary?

A:No, we've got threespecies in North Americaand all of them are found in Alberta. I've seen all threein Alberta. Just this past spring, I was down at Frank Lake and saw a hooded merganser, which is a much smaller merganser but is stunning, actually, with its big white crest andits oversized head and it does a wonderful little mating dance when its courting the females.

And then there's the red-breasted merganser, which is actually the furthest northern nesting merganser, just south of the tundra landscape in the boreal forest.

And then of course there's the common merganser.

Q: Do they sound like a duck?

A:Maybe a mallard with a head cold. Not really very duck-like.

They're usually quiet out and there being pretty and when you look as good as a merganser, you don't have to quack.


With files from The Homestretch