The pintail or northern pintail is a duck species with wide geographic distribution that breeds in the northern areas of Europe and across the Palearctic and North America. It is migratory and winters south of its breeding range as far as the equator. Unusually for a bird with such a large range, it has no geographical subspecies, although the possibly conspecific duck Eaton's pintail is considered to be a separate species.
📌 Taxonomy
This species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae as Anas acuta. Within the large dabbling duck genus Anas, The specimens were collected by J. V. Arundel in Sydney Island (Manra Island), Phoenix Islands in 1885 and came to the Liverpool national collection via Canon Henry Baker Tristram's collection which was purchased in 1896.
📌 Distribution and habitat
This dabbling duck breeds in northern areas of the Palearctic as far south as about Poland and Mongolia, and in Canada, Alaska and the Midwestern United States. It winters mainly south of its breeding range, reaching almost to the equator in Panama, northern sub-Saharan Africa and tropical South Asia. Small numbers migrate to Pacific islands, particularly Hawaii, where a few hundred birds winter on the main islands in shallow wetlands and flooded agricultural habitats. Transoceanic journeys also occur: a bird that was caught and ringed in Labrador, Canada, was shot by a hunter in England nine days later, and Japanese-ringed birds have been recovered from six US states east to Utah and Mississippi. In parts of the range, such as Great Britain and the northwestern United States, the pintail may be present year-round.
The northern pintail's breeding habitat is open unwooded wetlands, such as wet grasslands, lake shores or tundra. In winter, it uses a wider range of open habitats, such as sheltered estuaries, brackish marshes and coastal lagoons. It is highly gregarious outside the breeding season, forming very large mixed flocks with other ducks.
📌 Behaviour
===Breeding===
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Both sexes reach sexual maturity at the age of one year. The male mates with the female by swimming close to her with his head down and tail up, whistling constantly. If there is a group of males, they will chase the female in flight until only one drake is left. The female prepares for copulation, which takes place in the water, by lowering her body; the male then bobs his head up and down and mounts the female, taking the feathers on the back of her head in his mouth. After copulation, he raises his head and back and whistles. Breeding takes place between April and June, with the nest being constructed on the ground and hidden amongst vegetation in a dry location, often some distance from water. It is a shallow scrape on the ground lined with plant material and down. The female lays seven to nine cream-coloured eggs at the rate of one per day; the eggs are in size and weigh , of which 7% is shell. If predators destroy the first clutch, the female can produce a replacement clutch as late as the end of July.
The hen alone incubates the eggs for 22 to 24 days before they hatch. The precocial downy chicks are then led by the female to the nearest body of water, where they feed on dead insects on the water surface. The chicks fledge in 46 to 47 days after hatching, but stay with the female until she has completed moulting.
About three-quarters of the chicks live long enough to fledge, but no more than half of these survive long enough to reproduce. The maximum recorded age is 27 years and 5 months for a Dutch bird.
📌 Feeding
The pintail feeds by dabbling and upending in shallow water for plant food mainly in the evening or at night, and therefore spends much of the day resting. Its long neck enables it to take food items from the bottom of water bodies up to deep, which are beyond the reach of other dabbling ducks like the mallard.
The winter diet consists mainly of plant material including seeds and rhizomes of aquatic plants, but the pintail sometimes feeds on roots, grain and other seeds in fields, although less frequently than other Anas ducks. During the breeding season, this bird eats mainly invertebrate animals, including aquatic insects, molluscs and crustaceans.
📌 Health
Pintail nests and chicks are vulnerable to predation by mammals, such as foxes and badgers, and birds such as gulls, crows and magpies. The adults can take flight to escape terrestrial predators, but nesting females in particular may be surprised by large carnivores such as bobcats. Large birds of prey, such as northern goshawks, will take ducks from the ground, and some falcons, including the gyrfalcon, have the speed and strength to catch flying birds.
It is susceptible to a range of parasites including Cryptosporidium, Giardia, tapeworms, blood parasites and external feather lice, and is also affected by other avian diseases. It is often the dominant species in major outbreaks of avian botulism and avian cholera, and can also contract avian influenza, the H5N1 strain of which is highly pathogenic and occasionally infects humans.
The northern pintail is a popular game species due to its speed, agility, and excellent eating qualities, and is hunted throughout its range. Although one of the world's most numerous ducks, the combination of hunting and other factors has led to a decline in population numbers, and local hunting restrictions have been introduced at times to help conserve numbers.
This species' preferred habitat of shallow water is naturally susceptible to problems such as drought or the encroachment of vegetation, but this duck's habitat might be increasingly threatened by climate change. Populations are also affected by the conversion of wetlands and grassland to arable crops, depriving the duck of feeding and nesting areas. The timing of spring planting means that many nests of this early breeding duck are destroyed by farming activities, and as demonstrated by a Canadian study which showed that more than half of the surveyed nests were destroyed by agricultural work such as ploughing and harrowing.
Hunting with lead shot, in conjunction with the use of lead sinkers in angling, has been identified as a major cause of lead poisoning in waterfowl, which often feed on the bottom of lakes and wetlands where the shot collects. A Spanish study showed that northern pintail and common pochard were the species with the highest levels of lead shot ingestion, higher than in northern countries of the Western Palearctic Flyway, where lead shot is banned. In the United States, Canada, and many western European countries, all shot used for waterfowl must now be non-toxic, and therefore may not contain any lead.
📌 Status
The northern pintail has a large range, estimated at , and a population estimated at 4.8–4.9 million individuals. The IUCN has classified the northern pintail as not being threatened globally,
In the Palaearctic, there has been a decline in breeding populations across much of the region, including Russia, where the species has its population stronghold. In other regions, populations are either stable or fluctuating.
The pintail population in North America has been severely impacted by avian diseases, although the extent of this impact to other regions remains uncertain. Specifically, the breeding population fell from over 10 million in 1957 to 3.5 million in 1964. Although the species has recovered from that low point, the breeding population in 1999 was 30% below the long-term average, despite years of major recovery efforts. In 1997, an estimated 1.5 million water birds, most of them northern pintails, died from avian botulism during two outbreaks in Canada and Utah.
The northern pintail is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies, but it has no special status under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), which regulates international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants.