Domesticated ducks
Domesticated ducks are kept for meat, eggs and
down. Many ducks are also kept for show, as pets or for
their ornamental value. Most domesticated ducks originated
from the
Mallard Anas platyrhynchos.
Breeds
There are many existing breeds with more being created
today. Most domesticated breeds are descendants from the
wild Mallard with exception of the Muscovy. Breeds are
sorted into size classes. Below are breeds accepted by the
American Poultry Association.
Bantam |
Lightweight |
Mediumweight |
Heavyweight |
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- Appleyard
- Aylesbury
-
Muscovy
-
Pekin
- Rouen
- Saxony
- Gressingham (Wild Mallard crossed with
Pekin)
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Gender differences
There are several ways to tell if a duck is a female or a
drake. They can be sexed by voice when their voice changes
at 4 to 5 weeks old. Females have a loud quack which ducks
are known for. Drakes, however, have a raspy quiet quack.
Depending on the breed and variety, drakes have different
plumage than females. Day-old ducklings can be sexed by
looking inside their vents, but if this is done incorrectly it can hurt or
possibly kill the duckling.
Sometimes drakes have curly tail feathers and female
ducks have straight tail feathers.
Farming
Ducks have been farmed for hundreds of years. They are
not as popular as the
chicken, because chickens have much more white lean meat
and are easier to keep confined. Nevertheless, the duck is a
popular and well known farm bird.
Ducks are farmed for their meat, eggs, and down. Their
eggs are bluey green to white depending on the breed.
Ducks can be kept free range, in cages, or in
batteries. To be healthy, ducks should be allowed access to
water, though battery ducks are often denied this. They
should be fed a grain and insect diet. Its a popular
misconception that ducks should be fed bread; bread is no
nutritional value and can be deadly when fed to developing
ducklings.
The females of most breeds of domestic duck are very
unreliable at sitting their eggs and raising their young,
and it has been the custom on farms for centuries to put
duck eggs under a
broody hen for hatching; nowadays incubators are usually
used. However, young ducklings rely on their mother for a
supply of preen oil to make them waterproof, and a hen does not
make as much preen oil as a duck; and an incubator makes
none.
As pets and ornamentals
Ducks can be kept as pets. They can be kept in a garden
or backyard and will often eat insects and slugs. A pond or
water dish is recommended although they will probably dredge
out and eat any wildlife and
frogspawn in a pond, and even swallow adult frogs and toads,
as they have been bred to much bigger than wild ducks with a
"hull length" (base of neck to base of tail) up to a foot or
more. A coop should be provided for shelter, and for safety
at night from predators such as foxes, as their size makes them unable to fly properly.
Ducks are also kept for their ornamental value. Breeds
have been developed with crests and tufts or striking
plumage. Shows are held in which ducks can be displayed.
See also
Gallery
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A domesticated muscovy duck in a Serbian
village
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External links