

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 Harlequin duck!
You were banded by Ducks Unlimited Canada scientists one winter along Vancouver Island’s shore. For the next year, you wore a leg band with a special satellite tracking device that helped these scientists learn more about how to protect ducks like you.
You are a type of sea duck, so your family spends most of the year swimming in the Pacific Ocean between Alaska and California. But your parents flew over the mountains to Alberta to make her nest.
Your mom laid you and four other creamy-white eggs in a nest beside a rushing river high in the Rocky Mountains. Your dad flew back to the West Coast before you hatched.
Within a few months, you had grown your flight feathers and it was time to follow your mom to migrate west to the coast. A short while later you joined other sea ducks along the marshy shores of Vancouver Island. Not all ducks fly south!
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. Protec ting wetlands is one way to help ducks.
Fast Facts:
- diving duck—dives deep in the ocean for food
- eats fish and other small sea life
- likes estuaries, special types of wetlands formed where rivers enter the ocean
- found on both the east and west coasts of Canada
- The Harlequin is very rare in parts of Canada and was the first duck species to be added to Canada’s list of threatened and endangered species. Harlequins nest on fast flowing rivers and may be disturbed by people who enjoy sport rafting.
