Connecticut Audubon Bird Finder for December 27: Long-tailed Duck
Long-tailed Duck
Clangula hyemalis
Where to find it: Look in shallow, sandy bottomed, salt water areas of Long Island Sound, at the mouths of rivers and occasionally inland on larger rivers and lakes. Specific likely locations for finding Long-tailed Ducks include Greenwich Point Park, Calf Pasture Beach in Norwalk, Penfield Reef in Fairfield, and Stratford Point. Further east, the parking lot at Dock & Dine Restaurant in Old Saybrook is a fairly reliable location; also check Harkness Memorial State Park in Waterford, and Avery Point and Bluff Point State Park in Groton.
How to find it: Long-tailed Ducks are uncommon but regular visitors to Connecticut waters. Look for a low flying duck, usually as a single bird or pairs (sometimes small groups). My first impression of this bird is that it is pointed on all four corners, and flies with a very rapid, stiff winged appearance (short wing beats). If you want to see the “mother lode” of Long-tails, visit Nantucket with Connecticut Audubon Society EcoTravel for the migration of 250,000 birds, seen each evening as they come in from the sea during winter months. Spectacular!
What it looks like: Plumages are variable but most colorful in the winter months when males are a lovely patterning of white, gray, black, and chestnut. Males have distinctive long central tail feathers that extend well beyond the wing tips of a resting bird. Most ducks molt twice a year, but Long-tailed Duck has a nearly continuous molt with three different plumages and of course all the intermediate versions.
What if the bird isn’t there? Long-tailed Ducks can be found in areas where other wintering sea ducks are found, so one should be keeping an eye out for all three scoter species, Common Goldeneye, Red-breasted Merganser, and Common Eider.
Conservation status: This is a diving duck that primarily eats crustaceans, plant material, and mollusks. Though typically found in shallower waters, this bird can dive up to 200 feet. Water quality is clearly a concern for this species both on its wintering grounds here in Connecticut and its nesting area in ponds of the Arctic. Because of the difficulty of census work for this species, data is limited, but populations seem to be declining. Long-tailed Duck is listed as “vulnerable” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, which means it is likely to become endangered unless its conditions improve. Unfortunately, because this species is a diving duck, it has often fallen victim to fishing nets and was lost by the thousands back in the 1950’s, primarily in the Great Lakes region.
This week’s Connecticut Audubon Bird Finder was contributed by Andy Griswold, director of Connecticut Audubon Society’s EcoTravel program.
Photos copyright Andy Griswold (top) and Anthony Zemba (bottom)/Connecticut Audubon Society.
To sign up for future Connecticut Audubon Bird Finder emails, send your name and town to tandersen@ctaudubon.org