ANATOMY OF BIRDS
GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION
MIGRATIONS OF BIRDS
CLASSIFICATION OF BIRDS
LIZARD-TAILED BIRD
AMERICAN TOOTHED-BIRDS
THE OSTRICHES
THE RHEAS
EMEUS AND CASSOWARIES
THE TINAMOUS
THE KIWIS
THE PENGUINS
LOONS AND GREBES
ALBATROSSES & PETRELS
STORK-LIKE BIRDS
GOOSE-LIKE BIRDS
FALCON-LIKE BIRDS
FOWL-LIKE BIRDS
CRANE-LIKE BIRDS
PLOVER-LIKE BIRDS
CUCKOO-LIKE BIRDS
THE ROLLER-LIKE BIRDS
SPARROW-LIKE BIRDS

 
   

Birds and Birding's Guide to:

Watching THE GOOSE-LIKE BIRDS

THE SWANS, GEESE, DUCKS, AND MERGANSERS

Mountain Ducks

Before passing to the final subfamily we may mention briefly the Mountain Ducks (Subfamily Merganettina), so called from their dwelling exclusively on the rushing mountain streams.

They are medium-sized or small birds with narrow compressed bills as in the Mergansers, but differ from them in the absence of the tooth-like serrations on the edges of the mandibles, and in the rather long and stiff tail.

Eight species are known, one in the mountain streams of New Zealand and the others in the rivers of the Andes. Of the New Zealand species (Hymenolcemus malacorhynchus) Buller says,”Far up the mountain gorge, where the foaming torrent, walled in on both sides, rushes impetuously over its shingle bed, surging around the huge water-worn boulders which obstruct its course, and forming alternately shallow rapids and pools of deep water, there the Mountain Duck is perfectly at home."

 

 

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