Ducks hanging on, ice or not: Aaron Yetter blogs on surprise of ducks hanging on, even on iced refuges

Aaron Yetter’s latest blog touches on the surprise of the number of ducks hanging around even with iced refuges; and, of course, he drops other nuggets.

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Ducks using an open water area on one of the frozen refuges on December 2nd, 2020. Credit: Aaron Yetter/Illinois Natural History Survey

Ducks using an open water area on one of the frozen refuges on December 2, 2020.

Credit: Aaron Yetter/Illinois Natural History Survey

Aaron Yetter’slatest blog off the weekly aerial waterfowl survey for the Illinois Natural History Survey notes a lot more ducks hung around, even with the ice, than he expected. I think he asked an interesting question on whether they will still be here next week when the warmup comes.

As usual, there were nuggets. For me, it was on goldeneyes.

Click herefor the listings of aerial surveys by the Illinois Natural History Survey. Keep up with research updates and aerial surveys at the Forbes Biological Station Facebook page.

Here is Yetter’s latest blog:

December 3rd, 2020 – Aerial Waterfowl Inventory Blog We waited until Wednesday of this week (December 2nd) to fly the waterfowl survey. The weather looked good so we decided to see what the cold snap would do to duck numbers. I feared most of the ducks would get out of here with the 20o F low temps on Monday and Tuesday. Boy was I wrong! We had lots of ice on Wednesday morning, but the ducks stayed. In fact, we saw more ducks than before Thanksgiving along both rivers. I am sure we had some new ducks arrive with the cold weather and north winds, as evidenced by the increasing number of mallards and common goldeneye (commonly known as whistlers or ice ducks). And we had some other divers (primarily lesser scaup) take off for warmer climates. The departure of scaup was also apparent in our band return data from ducks that we leg band during spring around Havana, IL and Pool 19 of the Mississippi River. Our weekly band return report from the Bird Banding Lab indicated the lesser scaup are definitely in Louisiana and Texas with several bands being reported from the deep south. This week we observed ~423,000 ducks along the Illinois River and ~830,000 ducks on the central Mississippi River. These numbers are well above average for the first week of December and 7% greater than last week along the Illinois River and 25% more than last week on the central Mississippi. Once again mallards were the most numerous species with almost a half a million mallards along the central Mississippi River and well over a quarter million on the Illinois River. I know many duck hunters in Illinois are going to doubt those numbers because hunting success has been poor for the most part, but we took several photos to show how they hunkered down and kept pockets of water from freezing in the cool temps. I guess we will see next week when we warm up and thaw if the ducks continued to stick around. Be careful in the cold and ice! For more information about the waterfowl survey, check out our webpage at www.bellrose.org. Stay tuned for more updates next week…….

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