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Wood Duck - References

Wood Duck
(Aix sponsa)

References


Bellrose, F.C. 1980. Ducks, geese, and swans of North America, Third ed.
     Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, PA. 540 pp.

Bellrose, F.C. and D.J. Holm. 1994. Ecology and management of the wood duck.
     Stackpole Books, Mechanicsburg, PA. 588 pp.

Drugger, K.M., and L.H. Fredrickson. 1992. Life history and habitat needs of
     the wood duck. U.S. Dep. Inter. Fish and Wildl. Serv., Fish and Wildlife
     Leaflet 13.1.6. Waterfowl Management Handbook. Washington, D.C. 8 pp.

DuPont, 1990. Nest boxes for wood ducks. Remington Farms. Remington/DuPont.

Ehrlich, P.R., D.S. Dobkin, and D. Wheye. 1988. The birder's handbook - A
     field guide to the natural history of North American birds. Simon &
     Schuster Inc., New York, NY.

Fredrickson, L.H., G.V. Burger, S.P. Havers, D.A. Graber, R.E. Kirby, and T.S.
     Taylor, eds. 1990. Proceedings of the 1988 North American Wood Duck
     Symposium, St. Loius, MO. 390 pp.

Haramis, G.M. 1995. A primer for wood duck nest box management. Pages C66-C84
     In W.R. Whitman, et al., (eds). Waterfowl habitat restoration,
     enhancement, and management in the Atlantic Flyway, Third Ed.
     Environmental Management Comm., Atlantic Flyway Council Technical Section,
     and Delaware Div. Fish and Wildlife.

Sauer, J.R., J.E. Hines, G. Gough, I. Thomas, and B.G. Peterjohn. 1997. The
     North American Breeding Bird Survey Results and Analysis. Version 96.4.
     Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Laurel, MD.

Sauer, J.R., S. Schwartz, and B. Hoover. 1996. The Christmas bird count home
     page. Version 95. 1. Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Laurel, MD.

Soulliere, G.J., C.A. Nauman, E. Lyle, and A.E. Geiger. 1992. Comparative use
     of wood duck nest house designs in Wisconsin. Wild Soc. Bull. 20:156-163.

Stephens, S.E. 1995. Effect of reduced nest-box size on wood duck production.
     M.S. Thesis, Mississippi State Univ., Mississippi State, MS. 45 pp.

Stephens, S.E., R.M. Kaminski, B.D. Leopold, and P.D. Gerard. 1998. Wood duck
     reproduction in large and small nest boxes. Wildl. Soc. Bull. In press.

Stokes, D., and L. Stokes. 1990. The complete birdhouse book. Little, Brown and
     Company, Boston, MA.
   
Coveside Small Wood Duck House
$49.95
"Dump nesting" occurs when a number of females lay eggs in a single house, which sometimes results in clutches with over 70 eggs. Mississippi State University did a study of Wood Ducks in an effort to reduce this problem. A smaller nest box was designed and "dump nesting" was reduced. Although fewer ducklings are fledged from each box, the survival rate is improved and the cost per fledgling is less. This box comes with a wire ladder and nesting chips, and the front opens for observation and cleaning.
RANGE: Breeds from British Columbia south to California, and from Montana east to Nova Scotia, and south to Texas and Florida; absent from Rocky Mountains and Great Plains. Winters near Pacific Coast north to Washington, and to New Jersey in East, rarely further north.
HABITAT: Nests beside wooded rivers and ponds. Visits freshwater marshes in late summer and fall.

(17"h x 7-1/2"w x 15"d)
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Coveside Wood Hooded Merganser Duck House
$64.95
Coveside's Wood Duck House opens two ways for observation and cleaning, and has an internal ladder for the duckings to climb out. Mother calls ducklings to the protection of the open water at age one day.
RANGE: Breeds from British Columbia south to California, and from Montana east to Nova Scotia, and south to Texas and Florida; absent from Rocky Mountains and Great Plains. Winters near Pacific Coast north to Washington, and to New Jersey in East, rarely further north.
HABITAT: Nests beside wooded rivers and ponds. Visits freshwater marshes in late summer and fall.

(24-1/4"h x 11"w x 15"d)

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Coveside Bufflehead Duck House
$47.95
The Bufflehead, with its striking white sides and white patch on its head, is smaller than most cavity nesting ducks.Dependent on nest boxes, this house is ideal due to the scarcity of holes excavated by a large woodpecker or flicker.
RANGE: Breeds in Alaska east to western Quebec, and south in mountains to Washington and Montana. Winters in southern U.S., south to Mexico, Gulf Coast and northern Florida.
HABITAT: Nests on wooded lakes and ponds; winters mainly on salt bays and estuaries.

(17-3/4"h x 9-1/4"w x 11"d)
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Coveside Common Merganser Duck House
$64.95
This house provides a perfect nest box for mergansers that normally nest in tree cavities. Positioning a house on a pole in the open water provides extra protection from predators.
RANGE: Breeds across Canada from eastern Alaska, Manitoba and Newfoundland south in mountains to California, northern New Mexico, Great Lakes and northern New England. Winters south to northern Mexico and Georgia; also in Eurasia.
HABITAT: Breeds on wooded rivers and ponds; winters mainly on lakes and rivers, occasionally on salt water.

(24-1/4"h x 11"w x 13"d)

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Support

The Registry of Nature Habitats - Buy Conservation Credits


For purchasing Conservation Credit(s)
You will receive
a copy of the John Audubon Multimedia CD
A replica of the complete (1840-1844)
James Audubon's Birds of America

You will also receieve a bluebird house for each Conservation Credit purchased and a 20% off coupon to be used on the A Bird's Home website!




Conservation Certificates

The Registry of Nature Habitats - Mission Statement

The Registry of Nature Habitats is dedicated to the preservation of land that, over time, has been a site and home for complex ecosystems. The Registry advocates preservation of these lands and its inhabitants, environmental education for community individuals and groups, and nurturing of these lands through restoration in order to conserve its natural resources for future generations.

Preserve

The Registry of Nature Habitats manages critical habitat, consisting of wetland, lowland, upland, forest and stream habitat, providing a home to wildlife species and plant species. As part of the mission to preserve these lands and its inhabitants, the Registry will continue to contract with owners of ecologically sensitive land as it becomes available.

Educate

The Registry of Nature Habitats is a "teaching ground," able to provide hands-on, interpretive learning experiences in areas such as ecology, botany, wildlife science, and geology, as well as the arts and humanities. The educational mission of The Registry of Nature Habitats is to teach an understanding and appreciaton of the environment, the invaluable lesson of land stewardship of our natural resources, and to expand the general knowledge of this habitat through scientific research. This will be accomplished through a year-round experiential, interactive approach, along with onsite and outreach activities including providing educational material both on this website, on media and through educational seminars. An on-site facility is in the design phase, which will house classrooms and an administrative space.

Nurture

Through several restoration projects, including the rebuilding of stream corridors, reintroducing native flora, and permitting only low-impact activities, the Registry is nurturing much land back to its natural state, undoing the damage of hundreds of years. The Registry of Nature Habitats restoration plan, developed with public and private partnerships and with local community support, will increase the land's value, enhance wildlife habitat, improve water quality, and preserve the integrity of the land's bio-diversity.

Renewable Energy

Promote the use of renewable and efficient energy technologies through education, training, workforce development, research, and project facilitation. The Registry supports clean energy development and energy conservation as the means to protect the environment, enhance public health, and save our nature habitats.

Conservation

We seek to educate people and provide innovative solutions that will help build a clean, more efficient world, by reducing energy consumption in a prudent way that does not threaten the natural balance that supports all life.



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