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CayugaDuckMomOfTwo
Songster
- Nov 3, 2021
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Thank you! They sure are amazingHello![]()
Those ducks look and sound awesome
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Thank you! They sure are amazingHello![]()
Those ducks look and sound awesome
Thank you! It'll be hard to ignore her because she's adorable, but I understand that it may get out of hand. I had a mark on my hand all day today where she clamped down.I also think it is a dominance behaviour. I learned the hard way that what starts out as cute little pecking becomes grabbing becomes painful, bruise causing bites. You need to make her stop now before she get older. I would stop touching her bill. Try ignoring her or pushing her away when she does this. I stopped hand feeding as well.
My ducks and I are still friends but I don't treat them the same way as my dog or cats. Sorry if that comes off as harsh.
You might want to do a search on dominate behaviour on BYC to see how others have dealt with this.
I think these ducks are tightly bonded rather than imprinted with CayugaDuckMomOfTwo. They will have imprinted on one day old ducklings when they first hatched and continued that imprinting on each other.They are definitely imprinted then.
According to the Wildlife Center of Virginia "Imprinting is a form of learning in which an animal gains its sense of species identification". Her ducks see her as the same species which is why they are trying to show dominate and mating behavior with her.I think these ducks are tightly bonded rather than imprinted with CayugaDuckMomOfTwo. They will have imprinted on one day old ducklings when they first hatched and continued that imprinting on each other.
I have a rescued muscovy who is tightly bonded with me as I resuscitated her when she was 2-3 days old. I hand fed and watered her every hour until she was recovered enough to go into my brooder and feed and drink from containers in there. But I didn't know her in the critical first day of her life so she wasn't imprinted on me.
I would like to read what the Wildlife Center of Virginia has written. The one sentence alone applies to bonding between mammals -- in much the way that human babies bond with their mammas. We would not talk about that as imprinting -- only bonding."Imprinting is a form of learning in which an animal gains its sense of species identification".
I would like to read what the Wildlife Center of Virginia has written. The one sentence alone applies to bonding between mammals -- in much the way that human babies bond with their mammas. We would not talk about that as imprinting -- only bonding.
Attached is an interesting paper on Imprinting [research on imprinting] from Harvard University that Duck lovers might find interesting. For them, imprinting is the instinct to follow something that moves in the first 48 hours and the learning of the fine differences between things that move so that they always follow their mother duck not any other mother duck on the pond
for everyday duck keepers, this distinction between imprinting and bonding is just semantics. We kn
Absolutely, and an interesting discussion.**Disclaimer**
I know tone is hard to differentiate especially over the internet so I would just like to add that I am enjoying this conversation and viewing it as a healthy debate.
Back to the conversation:
If you would like to get technical then we would have to determine what exactly was 2 days old or 48 hours. Most of the time when a duckling is said to be 2 days old it the end of it's first day and the start of day 2. Which very well could be within the 48 hour period. I guess we need to deliberate if imprinting is not only following mother, but also species identification. Both are crucial to the ducklings future development and often survival. Ducklings do not know what they are when they hatch and imprinting most would argue is not just knowing who to follow, but learning what they are. Here is bulk of the article and I'll provide the link below:
"Human-imprinting in Birds and the Importance of Surrogacy
What is imprinting?
Imprinting is a form of learning in which an animal gains its sense of species identification. Birds do not automatically know what they are when they hatch ā they visually imprint on their parents during a critical period of development. After imprinting, they will identify with that species for life.
Imprinting for wild birds is crucial to their immediate and long-term survival. For example, precocial baby birds (such as ducks, geese, and turkeys) begin the process of imprinting shortly after hatching so that they follow the appropriate adult, providing them with safety.
Imprinting allows baby birds to understand appropriate behaviors and vocalizations for their species, and also helps birds to visually identify with other members of their species so they may choose appropriate mates later in life.
The timing of the imprinting stage varies from species to species, and some species of birds are more susceptible to imprinting inappropriately on human caregivers for reasons not fully understood.
What happens if a bird imprints on humans?
If young birds imprint on humans, they will identify with humans for life. Reversing the imprinting process is impossible ā these birds are bonded to humans for life and will identify with humans rather that of their own species.
Imprinting on humans does not mean that birds will be āfriendlyā toward humans, nor does it mean they necessarily enjoy being near humans. Human-imprinted birds have no fear of people, and this lack of fear can sometimes lead to aggression toward humans. Itās not unusual for an imprinted bird to exhibit territorial behaviors toward humans just as it would with members of its own species.
Human-imprinted birds also frequently have a difficult time communicating with other birds of their own speciesā vocalizations, postures, and a fear of humans are all things that birds learn from their parents, siblings, and other birds. They are typically not accepted by other birds of their species, likely because human-imprinted birds display odd behaviors and lack the ability to communicate properly.
Ultimately, imprinted birds find themselves in a āgray areaā ā they cannot appropriately interact with either humans or their own species.
Birds who are human-imprinted are deemed unsuitable for release back into the wild due to these inappropriate interactions."
https://www.wildlifecenter.org/human-imprinting-birds-and-importance-surrogacy