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Garganey

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Garganey
Male
Female
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Anseriformes
Family: Anatidae
Genus: Spatula
Species:
S. querquedula
Binomial name
Spatula querquedula
Synonyms
  • Anas querquedula Linnaeus, 1758
  • Anas circia Linnaeus, 1758

The garganey (Spatula querquedula) is a small dabbling duck. It breeds in much of Europe and across the Palearctic, but is strictly migratory, with the entire population moving to Africa, India (in particular Santragachi), Bangladesh (in the natural reservoirs of Sylhet district) and Australasia during the winter of the Northern hemisphere,[2] where large flocks can occur. This species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. Like other small ducks such as the Eurasian teal, this species rises easily from the water with a fast twisting wader-like flight.

Their breeding habitat is grassland adjacent to shallow marshes and steppe lakes.

Taxonomy

[edit]

The first formal description of the garganey was by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae. He introduced the binomial name Anas querquedula.[3] A molecular phylogentic study comparing mitochondrial DNA sequences published in 2009 found that the genus Anas, as then defined, was non-monophyletic.[4] The genus was subsequently split into four monophyletic genera with ten species including the garganey moved into the resurrected genus Spatula.[5] This genus had been originally proposed by the German zoologist Friedrich Boie in 1822.[6][7] The name Spatula is the Latin for a "spoon" or "spatula". The specific epithet is derived from Latin querquedula, a word believed to represent to its call.[8]

The common English name dates from the 17th century and comes from Lombard language gargenei, the plural of garganell, which ultimately comes from the Late Latin gargala "tracheal artery".[9] The English usage owes its origins to Conrad Gesner who used the Italian name in the third volume of his Historiae Animalium (History of Animals) of 1555.[10]

Description

[edit]
Females
Spatula querquedula - MHNT

The adult male is unmistakable, with its brown head and breast with a broad white crescent over the eye. The rest of the plumage is grey, with loose grey scapular feathers. It has a grey bill and legs. In flight, it shows a pale blue speculum with a white border. When swimming it will show prominent white edges on its tertials. His crown (anatomy) is dark and his face is reddish brown.[11]

Some care is needed in separating the brown female from the similar common teal, but the stronger face markings and more frequent head-shaking when dabbling are good indicators. Confusion with the female of the blue-winged teal is also possible, but the head and bill shape is different, and the latter species has yellow legs. Pale eyebrow, dark eye line, pale lore spot bordered by a second dark line.[11]

Measurements:[12]

  • Size: 41 cm
  • Wingspan: 58 – 69 cm.
  • Weight: 300–440 g

These birds feed mainly by skimming rather than upending.

The male has a distinctive crackling mating call; the female is rather silent for a female duck, but can manage a feeble quack.

Garganey are rare breeding birds in the British Isles, with most breeding in quiet marshes in Norfolk and Suffolk. In Ireland a few pairs breed in County Wexford, and at Lough Beg in County Londonderry, with occasional breeding elsewhere.

The garganey is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies. The status of the garganey on the IUCN Red List is least concern.[1]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Garganey (Spatula querquedula) is a small, highly migratory dabbling duck in the family Anatidae, characterized by its sociable nature and formation of large flocks during migration and wintering.[1] Males in breeding plumage feature a brown head with a white superciliary stripe forming a crescent above the eye, grey flanks, and a pale blue speculum visible in flight, while females are mottled brown with bolder facial markings and a longer grey bill compared to similar species like the common teal.[2] Measuring about 39 cm in length with a 62 cm wingspan and weighing around 380 g, it is slightly larger than a teal but remains one of the smallest ducks in its genus.[2] Breeding across temperate and boreal regions of Europe and western Asia from March to May, the Garganey prefers shallow wetlands, ponds, and lakes with emergent vegetation for nesting, often in grassy margins or islands.[1] It is a full migrant, with the entire population moving southward to winter in freshwater and brackish habitats such as floodplains, coastal marshes, and lakes in central Africa, southern Asia, and parts of India from September to February.[1] During breeding, its diet consists primarily of aquatic invertebrates including insects, crustaceans, mollusks, and worms, shifting to seeds, grains, and plant matter in winter; feeding occurs by dabbling, upending, or surface skimming, mainly diurnally in summer and crepuscularly or nocturnally in winter.[3] The species' global population is estimated at 1.03–1.7 million mature individuals, with a slow decline attributed to habitat loss from agricultural intensification and wetland drainage, though it remains classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List due to its extensive range spanning over 32.5 million km².[1] Vagrants occasionally appear in the Americas and Australia, highlighting its dispersive potential, while in regions like the UK, breeding pairs number around 100, concentrated in eastern and southern wetlands and protected under conservation laws.[1][2]

Taxonomy and systematics

Etymology and naming

The English name "garganey" derives from the Italian dialectal term garganei, a plural form of garganello, which itself stems from Late Latin gargala meaning "throat," reflecting an onomatopoeic imitation of the bird's chattering call that resembles gargling.[4] This name was popularized in scientific literature by Swiss naturalist Conrad Gesner in his 1555 work Historiae Animalium, where he adopted the Lombard Italian term to describe the species.[5] The garganey was formally described and named by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 Systema Naturae as Anas querquedula, placing it within the genus Anas based on its dabbling duck characteristics; the specific epithet querquedula is a diminutive form of Latin querquedula, evoking the bird's quacking or chattering vocalizations. Subsequent taxonomic revisions, informed by molecular phylogenetic studies in the early 21st century, reclassified it to the genus Spatula as Spatula querquedula to better reflect its evolutionary relationships among teal-like ducks. In other languages, the garganey is known by names that often highlight its seasonal migration or call, such as French sarcelle d'été ("summer teal"), emphasizing its breeding presence in Europe, and German Knäkente, derived from the sound of its wing noise in flight.[6]

Classification and relationships

The Garganey (Spatula querquedula) is classified within the family Anatidae, subfamily Anatinae, and tribe Anatini, which encompasses the dabbling ducks.[1] Historically placed in the genus Anas, the Garganey was reclassified into the resurrected genus Spatula following molecular phylogenetic analyses in the late 1990s and 2000s that revealed the polyphyly of Anas.[7][8] This reassignment, adopted by the American Ornithological Society in 2017, groups the Garganey with other species in Spatula, including the Northern Shoveler (S. clypeata), Blue-winged Teal (S. discors), and Cinnamon Teal (S. cyanoptera), based on shared mitochondrial DNA sequences indicating a monophyletic clade distinct from the core Anas species.[8] Within this genus, phylogenetic studies using mitochondrial DNA have established the Garganey's close evolutionary relationship to the Blue-winged Teal and Cinnamon Teal, forming a well-supported subclade characterized by similar biogeographic patterns and morphological traits among New World and Old World dabbling ducks.[7] These findings, derived from comparative analyses of sequence variations across Anatini, underscore the role of molecular data in refining duck systematics beyond traditional morphology-based classifications.[7] The species is considered monotypic, with no formally recognized subspecies; the nominate form S. q. querquedula encompasses populations across its Palearctic breeding range, including potential clinal variations in Asian birds that have not warranted taxonomic distinction.[9]

Physical description

Plumage and morphology

The Garganey (Spatula querquedula) is a compact dabbling duck, measuring 37–42 cm in length with a wingspan of 58–65 cm and an average male weight of 300–500 g.[10] Its body form is streamlined for agile movement on water and in flight, typical of small dabbling ducks.[11] In breeding plumage, the male displays a rich brown head and breast accented by a prominent white supercilium that curves from above the eye down the nape, providing a striking facial pattern; the flanks and underparts are pale gray, while the wings feature a green speculum bordered in white and a pale blue-grey forewing, visible prominently in flight.[11][12] The female's plumage is more subdued and mottled in shades of brown across the body, offering effective camouflage in wetland vegetation, with a contrasting head pattern including a pale supercilium, dark crown, and eyestripe, though less bold than the male's.[11][2] Key morphological features include a broad, flat gray bill lined with fine lamellae for filtering invertebrates, seeds, and aquatic plants during dabbling in shallow water, and short legs set forward on the body to facilitate wading and upending without deep diving.[12][13] These adaptations support its foraging in vegetated shallows across its range.[14]

Sexual dimorphism and variations

The Garganey exhibits pronounced sexual dimorphism, particularly in breeding plumage, where males display brighter and more contrasting colors compared to the duller, more cryptic plumage of females. Adult males in breeding condition feature a distinctive white supercilium extending from the eye to the nape, brownish-black crown, golden-buff cheeks with dark mottling, vermiculated grey flanks, a white belly and undertail coverts, and elongated black-and-white scapular feathers.[15][16] In contrast, females maintain a year-round brown plumage with pale fringes on the feathers creating a scaly appearance, a narrow pale supercilium, spotted breast, and dirty white belly, providing effective camouflage in wetland habitats.[15][16] During the non-breeding season, male Garganeys undergo a complete post-breeding molt into eclipse plumage, rendering them superficially similar to females but with retained diagnostic wing features such as a pale blue-grey forewing and green speculum bordered by white.[16] This eclipse plumage includes darker backs, subtler vermiculations on the flanks, and less pronounced head markings than in breeding dress, with the transition occurring from late spring to summer.[15] The molt of primaries and secondaries during this period typically lasts from June to August, resulting in a flightless phase that lasts several weeks and coincides with the birds' presence on wintering grounds.[16][15] Females, while also molting post-breeding, do not show such dramatic seasonal changes and retain their mottled brown appearance throughout the year.[15] Juvenile Garganeys resemble adult females in plumage, with brown upperparts featuring pale margins, a narrow supercilium, and a duller speculum lacking the bright green sheen of adults.[15][16] Young males can be distinguished early by dirty blue-grey lesser and median coverts, while females show no blue tinge and have narrower white tips on secondaries.[16] The post-juvenile molt begins in September, involving the body, tail, and some wing coverts, and is often completed on wintering grounds, gradually transitioning juveniles toward adult-like plumage by the following spring.[15][16] Rectrices in juveniles are initially notched, becoming pointed after molt, aiding in age determination.[15]

Distribution and habitat

Global range

The Garganey (Spatula querquedula) has a broad breeding range across Eurasia, extending from the United Kingdom and western Europe eastward through Russia, Central Asia, China, and Japan, primarily in temperate wetland regions between approximately 42°N and 65°N latitude.[1][9] This distribution includes countries such as Russia (with significant populations in its European, Central Asian, and Asian parts), Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and Uzbekistan, where the species favors lowland marshes and floodplains.[1] The largest breeding populations occur in Russia and China, contributing substantially to the global estimate of 1.03–1.7 million mature individuals, with Europe's share alone comprising 681,000–920,000 mature birds.[1][17] During the non-breeding season, the Garganey migrates to the northern tropics, wintering mainly in sub-Saharan Africa, southern Asia, and parts of Australasia as far east as New Guinea.[1][9] Key wintering concentrations are found in West Africa, particularly the Inner Niger Delta in countries like Nigeria and Mali (hosting 1–1.8 million individuals), as well as Sudan (70,000–120,000 birds) and other East African nations.[17][18] In southern Asia, India and Bangladesh support large numbers, with additional wintering sites in Sri Lanka, Vietnam, and the Philippines.[1] The species is a vagrant outside its typical range, with records in the Americas including the United States, Canada, and Mexico, as well as Australia, Barbados, and Bermuda.[1] North American sightings are rare but widespread, often occurring as spring or fall migrants along coastal and interior wetlands.[19]

Habitat preferences

The Garganey (Spatula querquedula) primarily favors shallow freshwater wetlands characterized by emergent vegetation, such as small ponds, lakes, and marshes with abundant floating, fringing, and emergent plants like bulrushes (Typha spp.), sedges, pondweeds, and grasses that are not overly dense or tall.[1][20] These habitats include swampy meadows, flooded fields including rice paddies, and floodplains that provide suitable nesting sites in adjacent grasslands or under cover within 20-150 m of water.[21][1] The species avoids deep-water bodies and saline environments, preferring shallow depths that allow for easy access to resources.[21][20] During the breeding season, Garganeys select wetter habitats up to an altitudinal range of approximately 2,600 m, particularly in temperate and steppe regions where emergent vegetation supports nesting and early foraging needs.[20] In non-breeding periods, including wintering grounds in the tropics, the species shifts to slightly drier or more open landscapes such as seasonal floodplains, meadows, reservoirs, and rice fields, often in subtropical or tropical grasslands that become temporarily wet.[1][21] Overall, the Garganey occurs from sea level to 4,380 m, but breeding is concentrated at lower elevations within its preferred wetland mosaics.[1]

Behavior and ecology

Breeding biology

The Garganey breeds seasonally in the northern hemisphere from April to July, with pair formation often occurring on wintering grounds as early as September or October. Pairs are typically monogamous for the breeding season, and nesting occurs in scattered pairs or solitarily within suitable wetland habitats.[22][21] Nests are constructed as shallow scrapes on the ground, usually in dense vegetation such as grass, reeds, or wet meadows near shallow ponds or lakes, providing concealment and proximity to water. The nest is lined with plant material, down, and sometimes feathers from the female. The female lays a clutch of 8-12 eggs (ranging from 6-14), which are creamy white to buff in color; incubation begins after the clutch is complete and lasts 21-24 days, performed solely by the female; the male typically departs soon after the clutch is complete.[22][21] The chicks are precocial, covered in down and able to leave the nest shortly after hatching, following the female who leads them to water and provides protection and brooding. They fledge after 35-40 days, during which the chicks forage independently.[21]

Diet and foraging methods

The Garganey (Spatula querquedula) is omnivorous, with its diet varying markedly by season to align with nutritional demands and prey availability. In the breeding season during spring and summer, animal matter predominates, consisting chiefly of aquatic invertebrates such as molluscs, insects and their larvae (including waterbugs, caddisflies, water beetles, and midges), crustaceans (notably ostracods and fairy shrimps), worms, leeches, and occasionally small fish or amphibian spawn.[1] Plant material serves as a secondary component, including seeds, roots, tubers, stems, leaves, and buds from aquatic species like hornwort (Ceratophyllum) and naiad (Najas), as well as sedges and grasses.[1] During autumn and winter in non-breeding ranges, the diet shifts toward vegetarian sources, emphasizing seeds from pondweeds, smartweeds (Polygonum), sedges, dock (Rumex), wild rice, and grasses, supplemented by stems, leaves, and agricultural grains such as those from Echinochloa colona or water lilies (Nymphaea spp.).[1] This transition supports energy conservation in overwintering flocks, where wetland habitat structure influences the abundance of accessible plant matter.[1] Foraging occurs both diurnally and nocturnally, often in large, sociable flocks that form on migration routes and wintering sites.[1] The species employs classic dabbling techniques suited to shallow freshwater habitats, including surface skimming, head-dipping to filter food through the bill's lamellae, and upending to access submerged items.[9][23] These methods allow efficient capture of both surface-dwelling invertebrates and benthic vegetation, with occasional terrestrial picking of seeds or insects when near shorelines.[23]

Migration and movements

Patterns and routes

The Garganey (Spatula querquedula) is a long-distance migrant, with Palearctic breeding populations undertaking extensive journeys to wintering grounds in the Afrotropics and southern Asia.[1] These ducks follow two primary migratory pathways: a western route via the Mediterranean Sea to sub-Saharan West Africa, and an eastern route through the Middle East and across the Arabian Peninsula to East Africa, southern Africa, and the Indian subcontinent.[1][24] The migration occurs on a broad front, often nocturnally, with birds forming large flocks that can number in the millions at key congregation points, such as the approximately 2 million individuals gathering in West African wetlands annually.[25] Key stopover sites along these routes include the Volga Delta, a major moulting area, and coastal saltmarshes and lagoons on passage.[1] In the eastern pathway, important refueling areas include wetlands in India supporting the influx of migrants en route to or from wintering sites in South Asia.[1] Intra-continental movements further characterize the Garganey's strategy, with birds in Asia shifting along river systems and wetland networks to exploit seasonal resources.[1] In Africa, post-arrival dispersal involves nomadic patterns driven by flooding cycles, such as concentrations in the Senegal Delta and movements toward inland lakes in Mali and Chad.[1][24] These adaptations enable the species to navigate vast distances, with ring recoveries confirming connections between breeding sites in Siberia and Finland and wintering areas as far south as Senegal.[24]

Timing and triggers

The Garganey undertakes biannual migrations between its Eurasian breeding grounds and African and southern Asian wintering areas. Spring migration northward typically occurs from March to May, with birds departing wintering sites in sub-Saharan Africa as early as late February and arriving at breeding sites by mid-May.[1][9] Autumn migration southward takes place from September to November, beginning as early as late July in some populations but peaking in September and October as post-breeding birds move from Eurasia toward winter quarters.[1][21] Migration in the Garganey is primarily triggered by endogenous and exogenous factors, including changes in photoperiod that initiate hormonal shifts and gonadal development, signaling the onset of breeding or departure seasons. Food scarcity in wintering or breeding habitats further prompts movement, as declining invertebrate and plant resources reduce foraging efficiency and energetic reserves. These physiological cues are modulated by climate variability, such as warmer temperatures delaying autumn departures or altering spring arrival timings in response to precipitation patterns affecting wetland availability.[26][27][28] During migration, Garganeys typically progress at average speeds of 300–330 km per day, with maximums exceeding 600 km per day; non-stop flights over ecological barriers like the Sahara Desert extend to 1,000 km or more in single legs to conserve energy and minimize predation risk.[18][29]

Conservation status

The global population of the Garganey (Spatula querquedula) is estimated at 1,030,000–1,700,000 mature individuals (2023), with an overall decreasing trend suspected based on available data.[1] The species is classified as Least Concern by the IUCN (2025 assessment), reflecting its widespread distribution despite regional pressures.[1] In Europe, which holds approximately 35% of the global breeding range, the population comprises 681,000–920,000 mature individuals and has experienced a small overall decline over the past decade.[1] However, trends vary regionally, with increases observed in northern areas such as parts of Russia, linked to wetland restoration initiatives under EU biodiversity policies that enhance suitable breeding habitats.[17] In Asia, breeding populations, including those in Western Siberia and Southwest Asia totaling around 100,000–200,000 individuals, are also declining, primarily due to agricultural intensification that reduces available wetland areas.[17] These trends are assessed through a combination of aerial and ground-based surveys for waterbirds, systematic breeding bird monitoring in key regions, and citizen science contributions via platforms like eBird, with global estimates aggregated by Wetlands International's Waterbird Population Estimates portal.[1]

Threats and conservation efforts

The Garganey faces several primary threats across its range, with habitat loss being the most significant due to drainage, agricultural intensification, and infrastructure development. In its Eurasian breeding grounds, wetland drainage and conversion for reservoirs have reduced available habitats, contributing to broader regional losses estimated at around 35% of wetlands between 1970 and 2015. On non-breeding grounds in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly the Sahel, wetland degradation from dam construction, river diversions, and desertification—such as impacts from the Fomi Dam on the Inner Niger Delta—exacerbates vulnerability during migration and wintering. Avian influenza has emerged as an additional threat to migratory waterbirds.[1][17][30] Hunting pressure along migration routes poses another major risk, with over 500,000 individuals legally shot annually in countries like Russia, Ukraine, France, and Poland, alongside unregulated subsistence and commercial hunting in West Africa, such as in Mali. Climate change further compounds these issues by altering wetland hydrological cycles, increasing aridity and lowering water tables on breeding grounds, and causing droughts in Sahelian stopover sites that reduce breeding success through delayed migrations and reduced food availability.[1][17][31] Conservation efforts for the Garganey emphasize habitat protection and sustainable management through international frameworks. Key wetlands, including Ramsar-designated sites like the Inner Niger Delta, are prioritized for safeguarding breeding, migration, and wintering areas, with over 70 Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs) identified across its range. The Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA), under which the species is listed in Annex II, promotes national management plans, hunting quotas, bag monitoring, and the phase-out of lead ammunition to mitigate over-harvest. Restoration projects, supported by EU biodiversity policies, focus on hydrological rehabilitation and habitat enhancement in critical Eurasian and African wetlands to counteract degradation. Despite these threats, the global population of 1,030,000–1,700,000 mature individuals is decreasing but classified as Least Concern by the IUCN (2025).[1][17][32]

References

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