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Field of Mars Environmental Education Centre

Field of Mars Environmental Education Centre

Experience Engage Enable

Telephone02 9816 1298

Emailfieldofmar-e.school@det.nsw.edu.au

Wood duck

Wood duck

What are wood ducks and what do they look like?

Wood ducks are a small native Australian duck. The scientific name for the wood duck is Chenonetta jubata. Local Aboriginal Peoples may have referred to wood ducks as yurangai, the Darug name for duck.

Both males and females have a brown head, grey wings with black stripes and a grey and brown speckled belly. The easiest way to tell the male and female apart is to look at the head. The female has paler coloured stripes above and below her eye, and she is slightly smaller. The males have a smoother grey body, whilst the female's body is more mottled.


Where do wood ducks live?

Wood ducks are quite common across most of Australia.

Wood ducks need an environment that has fresh water and grass to graze on. They are often found next to a creek, river, lake, dam, pond, wetland or even in a suburban park.

At the Field of Mars Reserve there are many families of wood ducks along Buffalo Creek.


What do wood ducks eat?

Wood ducks eat grass and seeds. Sometimes they will eat invertebrates. This diet means wood ducks are omnivores.

They never dive for food in water, preferring to get their food on the land and the edge of the water.


Should people feed wood ducks?

No. Human beings should never feed native birds. Wood ducks eat mostly grass and invertebrates and are quite capable of finding their own food. Human food, especially bread, can make them sick.


What eats wood ducks?

The eggs and chicks can fall prey to Australian birds such as kookaburras, butcher birds, currawongs and ravens. Reptiles like snakes and goannas also eat the eggs and chicks. Eels can slurp ducklings from the surface of water. Once on the ground the chicks are easy prey for introduced species like cats, dogs, foxes and rats.


How are wood ducks adapted to their environment?

Wood ducks have pointed beaks at their tip. This helps them to pick and eat grass, seeds and invertebrates.

Wood ducks have webbed feet to assist with swimming. Their feathers are hydrophobic, meaning water runs off their bodies. This helps to keep the ducks dry and assists with flotation in the water.


How do wood ducks reproduce and what are their life stages?

Wood ducks form a pair for life and the male and the female are usually found close to each other. The female lays 8 to 12 eggs in early spring, in a tree hollow high up in a tree.

The eggs take about 28 days to hatch. The parents feed the chicks for around 3 to 4 weeks until they are ready to leave the nest.

The chicks stay close to their parents who protect them until they can be independent. If a person gets too close to a wood duck family the male will open his beak and hiss as a warning to back off. 


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