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Common Shoveler
Anas clypeata

IUCN Status: Least concern.
Size: Length; 56cm. Wingspan; 85cm. Weight; 1100g.
Habitat and distribution: Most of Nearctic and Palearctic; North America, Greenland, Mexico, Caribbean, Europe, Asia and North Africa. Freshwater wetlands, lakes, marshes and tidal mudflats.
Age: Up to 16 years.
Breeding: Nest is a depression in grass lined with down. Lay up to 14 eggs which are incubated for around 23 days.
Diet: Aquatic invertebrates, seeds and plants.
- Shovelers are found during winter in Great Britain, also breed in eastern and southern England.
- One of the 147 species of the Anatidae family, which are all ducks, geese and swans, more commonly known as wildfowl or waterfowl.
- Waterfowl bodies are adapted for a highly aquatic life, with webbed feet for swimming and a body shaped to improve buoyancy in the water and a thick covering of feathers for insulation. Different species specialise to fill different niches.
- All species have an oil-gland which is used whilst preening to maintain waterproofing of their feathers; the oil-gland is highly developed in this family.
- All species have salt glands above each eye, which filter the blood and excrete excess salt.
- Wildfowl have had a long association with humans; the Mallard is the direct ancestor of almost all current breeds of domestic duck. Humans utilise this family for meat, eggs, and feathers and in some countries they are even kept around houses to control insect numbers.
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