

Related Links
- Did you know the wetlands ducks call home are disappearing? Learn how you can help conserve wetlands for waterfowl, other wildlife and people to enjoy!
- How do wetlands work?
- More ducks and other wetland wildlife!
- Top 10 Wetland Facts
- Migration Maps
You're a mallard!
You were banded last August at Oak Hammock Marsh by some high school students attending Ducks Unlimited Canada’s Great Greenwing Adventure camp. Oak Hammock Marsh is near Winnipeg.
Your mom had laid you and 11 other greenish-white eggs in May. After you hatched in June, your mother led you and your siblings to the marsh to eat. You are a dabbler duck who feeds by straining invertebrates, seeds and plants from the water with your large bill.
Last fall, after growing your new flight feathers, you migrated with your family south to the coastal wetlands in Louisiana, U.S.A. You found a mate while wintering there, and this spring you will make your own nest on the grassy roof of Ducks Unlimited’s office building at Oak Hammock Marsh.
Download certificate!
Download a customized certificate (PDF, 1.3 MB) with your name to show your friends and family!
Banding or marking ducks helps scientists learn more about them and what they need to survive. Protecting wetlands is one way to help ducks.
Fast Facts:
- Dabbling duck (eats at water surface or by tipping up).
- Eats seeds, plants and invertebrates.
- Ancestor of nearly all domestic duck breeds
- May nest 3 or 4 times in the spring if its nest is destroyed by a predator like a skunk or crow.
- The most abundant and widely recognized duck in the world, this “puddle duck” will nest near any tiny body of water – including a backyard swimming pool!
