The adult male is unmistakable, with its brown head and breast with a broad white crescent over the eye. The rest of the plumage is grey, with loose grey scapular feathers. It has a grey bill and legs. In flight, it shows a pale blue
speculum with a white border. When swimming it will show prominent white edges on its
tertials. His
crown (anatomy) is dark and his face is reddish brown. •
Size: 41 cm •
Wingspan: 58 – 69 cm. •
Weight: 300–440 g These birds feed mainly by skimming rather than upending. The male has a distinctive crackling
mating call; the female is rather silent for a female duck, but can manage a feeble
quack. Garganey are rare breeding birds in the
British Isles, with most breeding in quiet marshes in
Norfolk and
Suffolk. In
Ireland a few pairs breed in
County Wexford, and at
Lough Beg in
County Londonderry, with occasional breeding elsewhere. The garganey is one of the species to which the
Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (
AEWA) applies. The status of the garganey on the
IUCN Red List is
least concern. ==References==