- Dec 11, 2015
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We raised a White Crested duckling a couple of years ago. We kept it separate until it was fairly large, then introduced it to our little flock, consisting of a Rouen drake, 2 Rouen ducks and one Cayuga duck. From day one the other ducks attacked the Crested, usually trying to pin her to the ground and pluck out the plumage on her head. We gave up and kept her separate. Later the crested became broody so we gave her some Rouen eggs to sit on. One of the eggs hatched and the Crested duck became a surrogate mother. When this new duckling grew large, it became a body guard for the crested duck and it was safe to let them join the flock. But after a few months the young adopted duck become less and less interested in protecting the Crested from attacks. From months the Crested would stay near the flock, but not too near lest she be chased away. Today we found the poor Crested duck cornered and exhausted in the blazing sun, her head nearly plucked clean of feathers and muddy from being trampled on by the other ducks. Needless to say she is again separated from the flock. It's a shame, as she clearly wants to be a part of the group. From what I have read the Crested duck is not so much a legitimate breed as it is a birth defect, a genetic mutation. The low rate of successful Crested hatchings would seem to bear that out. Is the unnaturalness of the crested duck causing the flock to act out so violently? If they were humans you would call it eugenics!