By the pond on the Greenway, saw several of these duck-looking birds, more goose size, though, and snapped a picture. Looked in 3 bird books and couldn't find them. Is it some kind of turkey? Not looking for critiques, just wonder what it is???
pttenn Cream of the Crop 9,671 posts Likes: 6 Joined Mar 2006 Location: Tennessee More info | Sep 14, 2006 19:08 | #1 By the pond on the Greenway, saw several of these duck-looking birds, more goose size, though, and snapped a picture. Looked in 3 bird books and couldn't find them. Is it some kind of turkey? Not looking for critiques, just wonder what it is??? Canon 50D, 40D, Tokina 12-24,Canon 18-55,Canon 28-135 IS, Canon 50 1.8,Canon 75-300 5.6,
LOG IN TO REPLY |
SalientGlass Goldmember 2,357 posts Joined Nov 2005 More info | Sep 14, 2006 19:51 | #2 Yeah, I'd like to know too. I caught some pictures of these yesterday and thought they looked a bit like a cross between a duck, goose and chook.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
nwyman Cream of the Crop More info | Sep 14, 2006 19:59 | #3 looks like a Muscovy Duck to me. EOS 6D, SX50HS, Tamron 150-600
LOG IN TO REPLY |
KeithR Goldmember 2,856 posts Likes: 1 Joined Aug 2006 Location: Blyth, Northumberland, NE England More info | Sep 14, 2006 20:06 | #4 Muscovy duck it is.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
SalientGlass Goldmember 2,357 posts Joined Nov 2005 More info | Sep 14, 2006 20:13 | #5 Is the rough face the give-away or do other types have that as well?
LOG IN TO REPLY |
nwyman Cream of the Crop More info | Sep 14, 2006 20:57 | #6 The face, for me. I googled it, and there are apparently whole bunches of different colors and mutations. But they all have that lovely face. EOS 6D, SX50HS, Tamron 150-600
LOG IN TO REPLY |
skydolphins Senior Member 864 posts Joined Jul 2006 Location: Warwick, RI More info | Sep 15, 2006 06:40 | #7 nice chot of a male (i believe) muscovy duck one of my fav ducks come in a variety of colors too. my friend used to have a bunch of them on her farm.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
JimM Goldmember 1,656 posts Likes: 39 Joined Aug 2006 More info | Sep 15, 2006 08:37 | #8 It is indeed a muscovy duck, the only domestic duck not bred from the wild mallard. It was domesticated from a wild South American species known as either the muscovy or royal duck. I haven't heard royal duck used for years. The true wild muscovy occurs as far north as Mexico. Although there is a small wild population in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas, most of the "wild" muscovy ducks in the U.S. are feral populations of the domestic form. More than anyone wanted to know, I'm sure.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Jim M wrote: It is indeed a muscovy duck, the only domestic duck not bred from the wild mallard. It was domesticated from a wild South American species known as either the muscovy or royal duck. I haven't heard royal duck used for years. The true wild muscovy occurs as far north as Mexico. Although there is a small wild population in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas, most of the "wild" muscovy ducks in the U.S. are feral populations of the domestic form. More than anyone wanted to know, I'm sure. No, that's very interesting...thank you for the info! Canon 50D, 40D, Tokina 12-24,Canon 18-55,Canon 28-135 IS, Canon 50 1.8,Canon 75-300 5.6,
LOG IN TO REPLY |
![]() | x 1600 |
| y 1600 |
| Log in Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!
|
| ||
| Latest registered member was a spammer, and banned as such! 2243 guests, 131 members online Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018 | |||