Mergansers in flight Source: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |
Today was the first time we've seen Common Mergansers (Mergus merganser americanus), the american subspecies of the merganser known as the Goosander (M. m. merganser Linnaeus) in Europe. These diving ducks always seem to appear just after we notice the South Branch of the Potomac has turned that familiar shade of winter green.
Mergansers have serrated bills, and like other diving ducks, their legs are positioned further back along their body. This facilitates diving but also requires a running start to get up and out of the water. They fish cooperatively and have a lot of other behaviors similar to cormorants, but they also nest in tree cavities. I think of cormorants as among our most primitive birds, so it's interesting to consider these beautiful mergansers as modern semi-aquatic flying reptiles.
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