Is this duck a Drake?

Bill color can sometimes be used for sexing younger rouens before they get their 'boy' feathers. The males will have a more greenish bill and the females will have a more brownish one.

As mentioned above, young welsh harlequins can also be sexed by their bill colors. They can actually be pretty effectively sexed upon hatching from their bill colors.

Some ducks can be sexed by their bill colors, however it typically just depends on the breed of duck whether this can be an applicable way to sex them or not.
 
Bill color can sometimes be used for sexing younger rouens before they get their 'boy' feathers. The males will have a more greenish bill and the females will have a more brownish one.

As mentioned above, young welsh harlequins can also be sexed by their bill colors. They can actually be pretty effectively sexed upon hatching from their bill colors.

Some ducks can be sexed by their bill colors, however it typically just depends on the breed of duck whether this can be an applicable way to sex them or not.
These don't appear to be Welsh harlequins
 
Haha I didn't say that they were - Someone else had said that ducks cannot be sexed by their bill colors, and I just used Welsh harlequins as an example towards the fact that some breeds can be. With runners, I believe the only way to tell (without vent sexing) would be the duck's stature, voice or the curly tail feather drakes tend to get.
 
Here is the excerpt of the book, Guide to Raising Ducks, where Holderead talked about sexing ducklings and ducks - I took a screenshot of where he mentions bill color of purebred ducks.
https://books.google.com/books?id=o...holderread sexing ducks by bill color&f=false
Screenshot_20180601-222334.png
 

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