Netta
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Netta | |
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Red-crested pochard | |
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Netta
Kaup, 1829
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Species | |
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Netta is a genus of diving ducks. Unlike other diving ducks, the Netta species are reluctant to dive, and feed more like dabbling ducks.
These are gregarious ducks, mainly found on fresh water. They are strong fliers; their broad, blunt-tipped wings require faster wing-beats than those of many ducks and they take off with some difficulty.
They do not walk as well on land as the dabbling ducks because their legs tend to be placed further back on their bodies to help propel them when underwater.
The probably extinct pink-headed duck, previously listed as Rhodonessa caryophyllacea, has recently been shown by phylogenetic analysis to be closely related to the red-crested pochard,[1] so has now been transferred to the same genus, as Netta caryophyllacea. However, this has been questioned due to numerous and pronounced peculiarities of that species.[2]
Gallery
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Red-crested-pochard.JPG
A male red-crested pochard
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Female Red-crested Pochard 800.jpg
A female red-crested pochard
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Rosy-billed Pochard (Netta peposaca) RWD.jpg
A male rosy-billed pochard
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Netta erythrophthalma Germany01.jpg
A female southern pochard
References
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External links
Media related to Netta at Wikimedia Commons
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- ↑ Collar, N. J.; Andreev, A. V.; Chan, S.; Crosby, M. J.; Subramanya, S. & Tobias, J. A. (eds.) (2001): Pink-headed Duck. In:Threatened Birds of Asia: The BirdLife International Red Data Book, p. 489–501. BirdLife International. ISBN 0-946888-44-2