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You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/nov/09/birdwatch-coots-gadwall
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Birdwatch: why coots and their ‘friends’ are worth a closer look | Birdwatch: why coots and their ‘friends’ are worth a closer look |
(3 months later) | |
The ‘funny black ducks’ from my youth are often near a gadwall – and I was shocked to learn why | The ‘funny black ducks’ from my youth are often near a gadwall – and I was shocked to learn why |
I have a soft spot for coots, because almost 60 years ago, when I was a young child, they kick-started my life as a birder. | I have a soft spot for coots, because almost 60 years ago, when I was a young child, they kick-started my life as a birder. |
As I mentioned in an early Guardian column, this began when my mother took me down to feed the birds by the River Thames at Laleham, and I asked her what those “funny black ducks” were. | As I mentioned in an early Guardian column, this began when my mother took me down to feed the birds by the River Thames at Laleham, and I asked her what those “funny black ducks” were. |
She didn’t know, but when we got home, she recalled that we had a copy of The Observer’s Book of Birds. Reading this, I discovered that they weren’t ducks at all but members of the rail family. | She didn’t know, but when we got home, she recalled that we had a copy of The Observer’s Book of Birds. Reading this, I discovered that they weren’t ducks at all but members of the rail family. |
Today, a lifetime later, I come across coots whenever I visit the Avalon Marshes. Yet like many birders, I often ignore them in favour of more glamorous species. But coots are always worth a closer look. | Today, a lifetime later, I come across coots whenever I visit the Avalon Marshes. Yet like many birders, I often ignore them in favour of more glamorous species. But coots are always worth a closer look. |
Back in the 1990s, while filming at Wraysbury gravel pits with Bill Oddie, we noticed that every time we saw a coot, there was usually a gadwall or two close by. We assumed the gadwalls were waiting for the coots to return to the surface and then feeding on aquatic plants they had inadvertently disturbed. | Back in the 1990s, while filming at Wraysbury gravel pits with Bill Oddie, we noticed that every time we saw a coot, there was usually a gadwall or two close by. We assumed the gadwalls were waiting for the coots to return to the surface and then feeding on aquatic plants they had inadvertently disturbed. |
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In fact, the truth is far darker than we first thought. It seems that gadwalls are not passive feeders but occasionally steal food directly from the coots – a behaviour known as kleptoparasitism. Given that coots are famously aggressive, and gadwalls look so sweet and innocent, that really is a surprise. | In fact, the truth is far darker than we first thought. It seems that gadwalls are not passive feeders but occasionally steal food directly from the coots – a behaviour known as kleptoparasitism. Given that coots are famously aggressive, and gadwalls look so sweet and innocent, that really is a surprise. |
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