I'm going to give you some insights from what I have noticed from the Call varieties I have here...
The whites are going to be cliquish, end of story. They seem to stand together and flock together no matter how many other ducks you mix them in with. They will breed with others but they will eat, sleep and flock together in the pools. The drakes also seem to me to be more prone to fighting than the other varieties, though I have seen grays of either sex get nasty on occasion too. The hens are sweet but seem to have a definite preference for sticking with other white hens. The personalities of the whites seems to hold true with any that I have introduced to the group.
My blacks are my easiest-to-get-along-with Calls. I have yet to see one start a fight, but they sure can finish one! They can be voracious fighters when provoked but pretty much have a live-and-let-live nature. The babies are wily and squirrelly but seem to settle into hardy and well-adjusted individuals. My senior self-black drake, Blackjack, is very dedicated to his mate from the breeding pen this year and shadows her everywhere like they are joined at the hip in the community stall I have them in for the winter.
So based on this, I would say put your blue bibbed hen in with your black and separate them from the group. Black and blue are colors that can compliment each other in a breeding, and it will get her out from under the bullying of the whites.
The whites are going to be cliquish, end of story. They seem to stand together and flock together no matter how many other ducks you mix them in with. They will breed with others but they will eat, sleep and flock together in the pools. The drakes also seem to me to be more prone to fighting than the other varieties, though I have seen grays of either sex get nasty on occasion too. The hens are sweet but seem to have a definite preference for sticking with other white hens. The personalities of the whites seems to hold true with any that I have introduced to the group.
My blacks are my easiest-to-get-along-with Calls. I have yet to see one start a fight, but they sure can finish one! They can be voracious fighters when provoked but pretty much have a live-and-let-live nature. The babies are wily and squirrelly but seem to settle into hardy and well-adjusted individuals. My senior self-black drake, Blackjack, is very dedicated to his mate from the breeding pen this year and shadows her everywhere like they are joined at the hip in the community stall I have them in for the winter.
So based on this, I would say put your blue bibbed hen in with your black and separate them from the group. Black and blue are colors that can compliment each other in a breeding, and it will get her out from under the bullying of the whites.