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Malheur National Wildlife Refuge
Malheur National Wildlife Refuge,
May 21, 2012
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Program Night: Attracting Hummingbirds to Your Yard
Northlake Unitarian Universalist Church, Kirkland,
May 24, 2012
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Birdathon Trip: Discovery Park, Seattle
Wilburton Park & Ride, Bellevue,
May 26, 2012
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Birding the Hot Spots
Meet at Newport Hills Park & Ride, Bellevue,
May 28, 2012
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Birding Walk: Lake Sammamish State Park, Issaquah
Lake Sammamish State Park, Issaquah,
May 30, 2012
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You are here: Home Birds Birding Resources Gallery Ducks American Wigeon (Anas americana)

American Wigeon (Anas americana)

American Wigeon by Sunny Walter
 
American Wigeon by Sunny Walter

A medium sized duck, about 19" in length.  The four letter code is AMWI.  The male's white forehead and cap are conspicuous in mixed flocks.  The male also has large white patches on the upperside of the wings, a brown body, a grayish-brown head with a bold green patch through the eye.  The female AMWI has some of the white in the wings and show more brown on the sides of the body.

Wigeons are fond of many of the sub-surface salt-water plants and are frequently seen among them feeding diving ducks.  If they cannot reach food by tipping, they will rob diving ducks, snatching plants from the victims' bills as the divers emerge. 

In flocks of 100 or more AMWI there will occasionally be a Eurasian Wigeon (Anas Penelope).  The Eurasian adult males have a reddish-brown head with a cream colored forehead and cap.  The female shows a somewhat browner head than the female AMWI, but in the field they cannot be easily separated.  The habits of the two species of wigeon are very similar.

The AMWI is one of the most abundant and conspicuous wintering ducks along the Pacific Coast.  Large flocks can be seen feeding in farm fields, rafting on coastal bays or inland lakes, or grazing on the grass in urban parks and golf courses. 

The musical "whew-whew" notes of the male can be heard constantly from a flock.  They are presently common on Phantom Lake in and the farm fields on the Lake Hills Greenbelt trail, and at Juanita Bay and Lake Sammamish State Park.

 

 

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