Subspecies in India
Old Taxonomy: Anas galericulata Linnaeus, 1758
Photo Gallery and Species Biology
Breeding season: April-June, mostly extralimital (E. Asia).
Nest: Natural tree hollows lined with grasses. Prefers the trees present along the forest streams.
Eggs: Clutch of 7–14 white or buff colour eggs. 49 x 36.5 mm in size.
Size: 41–51 cm.
Distinguishing characters:
Male (breeding): A multi-coloured, little duck - orange-buff, metallic bronzy and coppery blue, green, purple, cinnamon, and chestnut. Sides of face greyish buff, bill red with flesh-pink nail, legs and feet orange-buff and eyes dark brown with yellowish outer ring. Lower neck and sides of breast purple-copper.
Male (eclipse): More or less like female, but glossier. Bill remains reddish and legs yellow.
Female: About, head and mop-like crest grey, with a white ring round eye continued as a streak behind it. Rest of upperparts olive brown. Blue-green wing margined with black and white. Chin, throat, and upper neck white. Lower neck, breast, sides, and flanks olive-brown broadly mottled paler. Rest of underparts white.
Young/Immature: resembles female, though female has pinkish bill, and young are more uniformly grey-brown with less distinct face markings and less obviously dappled appearance to upper breast and flanks.
Similar Species in India: No other small duck looks similar.
Vagrant to India (NE states), Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand, Vietnam Hong Kong; Resident and breeding population at China, Japan, Korea, Russia. It forms small flocks mainly resticting itself to the streams and lakes in the forested areas. Unlike many other duck species, it frequently perches and roosts on the tall trees.
Foraging Behaviour: Diet largely include seeds, particularly nuts, acorns, aquatic plants and animal food like land snails, frogs, tadpoles, insects, fish.
Call/Song: Generally quiet, usually vocalizes when disturbed or in courtship. Male calls are mainly sharp, rising whistle-like “hwick” or “uib uib”, whereas female has a loud, sharp, single-noted “kett” or “ke” call, which might easily be mistaken for a Common Coot.
Migration Status: Resident.
IUCN Status: Least Concern.
State | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | No date |
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Andaman and Nicobar Islands | 1 | ||||||||||||
Andhra Pradesh | |||||||||||||
Arunachal Pradesh | |||||||||||||
Assam | |||||||||||||
Bihar | |||||||||||||
Chandigarh | |||||||||||||
Chhattisgarh | |||||||||||||
Dadra & Nagar Haveli | |||||||||||||
Daman & Diu | |||||||||||||
Delhi | |||||||||||||
Goa | |||||||||||||
Gujarat | |||||||||||||
Haryana | |||||||||||||
Himachal Pradesh | |||||||||||||
Jammu and Kashmir | |||||||||||||
Jharkhand | |||||||||||||
Karnataka | |||||||||||||
Kerala | |||||||||||||
Lakshadweep | |||||||||||||
Madhya Pradesh | |||||||||||||
Maharashtra | |||||||||||||
Manipur | |||||||||||||
Meghalaya | |||||||||||||
Mizoram | |||||||||||||
Nagaland | |||||||||||||
Odisha | |||||||||||||
Paschimbanga | |||||||||||||
Pondicherry | |||||||||||||
Punjab | |||||||||||||
Rajasthan | |||||||||||||
Sikkim | |||||||||||||
Tamil Nadu | |||||||||||||
Tripura | |||||||||||||
Uttar Pradesh | |||||||||||||
Uttarakhand | |||||||||||||
West Bengal | |||||||||||||
Total | 1 |
1. Rasmussen, P. C., and J. C. Anderton. 2005. Birds of South Asia: The Ripley Guide. Washington, DC.
2. Ali, S., and S. D. Ripley. 1968. Handbook of the Birds of India and Pakistan: Together with those of Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan and Ceylon (Vol. 1). Oxford University Press.
3. Stuart Baker, E. C. 1933. The Nidification of Birds of the Indian Empire. Taylor And Francis.
Page citation
Anonymous 2024. Aix galericulata (Linnaeus, 1758) – Mandarin Duck. In Satose, V., A. Bayani, V. Ramachandran, P. Roy, and K. Kunte (Chief Editors). Butterflies of India, v. 2.17. Published by the Indian Foundation for Butterflies. URL: https://www.birdsofindia.org/aix-galericulata, accessed 2024/12/13.