, India) Lesser whistling duck are usually
gregarious. They feed mainly on plants taken from the water as well as grains from cultivated rice apart from small fish,
frogs and invertebrates such as
molluscs and
worms. They dabble as well as dive in water. They will often waddle on the land and
common mynas have been noted to follow them on grass. Courtship involves the male facing the female and dipping and raising its bill in the water and swimming around the female. They breed during the
monsoon or rainy season and may vary locally in relation to the food availability. The nest site may be a tree hole lined with twigs and grass or built in the fork of a large tree, sometimes reusing an old nest of a
kite or
heron or even on the ground. The clutch varies from 7 to 12 white eggs that are incubated by both the parents. Large clutches of up to 17 have been noted although these may be indications of intraspecific
brood parasitism. The eggs hatch after about 22–24 days. More than one brood may be raised in a single season. Young birds may sometimes be carried on the back of the parents. Local names like
sili and
silhahi in India are based on their wheezy two-note calls. They become very tame in captivity, walking about and responding to whistles. Individuals in captivity in the USA have lived for up to 9 years. Several endoparasitic
cestodes including
Hymenolepis javanensis and
Cittotaenia sandgroundi have been described from lesser whistling duck hosts apart from ectoparasitic
bird lice and
mites. == References ==