Fangeddeer
Songster
- Apr 23, 2023
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I’m pretty sure in the US it’s illegal to keep mallard ducks, since they are a wild migratory bird.Not quite sure what you are nervous about. Looks like a young mallard hen to me, too. Hard to tell in your photo, but here is a Google photo of a Mallard hen that looks a little older with more color developed in the wings.
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BTW, I noticed you have the duck tethered to a string or rope. Just wanted to mentioned that I live on a lake and we let the ducks and geese swim out in the lake all the time when I had them. But we had them trained to come home when we called them in to feed. Every time we fed them, we gave out our duck call so they associated our duck call with food. Even when they swam far out into the lake, they would still come flying back home for free food.
You can buy them from specific people with paperwork. Usually they have a back toe clipped to show it was hatched in captivity. I think North Dakota is the only one that outright says you can't ship thereI’m pretty sure in the US it’s illegal to keep mallard ducks, since they are a wild migratory bird.
OP, did you get her from the wild?
Good to know. Years back I had a neighbor that got reported for having some mallards, but they had found a nest that the mama had been obviously killed by a predator, so they raised them. I think in the end they had to turn them over to a wildlife rescue.. so I assumed that’s what OP meant by “nervous”.You can buy them from specific people with paperwork. Usually they have a back toe clipped to show it was hatched in captivity. I think North Dakota is the only one that outright says you can't ship there
I’m pretty sure in the US it’s illegal to keep mallard ducks, since they are a wild migratory bird.
OP, did you get her from the wild?
The bird in question is definitely not a wild Mallard and I don't think it is a domestic one, either. Looks like maybe a mixed breed to me.
That is a male Mallard in eclipse (summer/nonbreeding) plumage. You can tell by the yellow bill, reddish breast, and curled tail feathers.but here is a Google photo of a Mallard hen that looks a little older with more color developed in the wings.
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