Feeding The coscoroba swan's diet has not been studied in detail, but it apparently feeds on aquatic and some terrestrial plants, small aquatic invertebrates, and small fish. It forages mainly while swimming or wading in shallow water and in contrast to other swans rarely upends. It also grazes on land. It often feeds with
black-necked swans (
Cygnus melanocoryphus).
Breeding The coscoroba swan breeds in the local spring, which is May to October in northern Argentina, July to December in Chile, and July and August in southern Brazil. The species forms long-term pair bonds. Its nest is a mound of vegetation lined with soft grass constructed by both members of a pair on a small islet, partially floating in a reedbed or long grass close to water. The
clutch size is four to nine oval eggs that weigh about with dimensions of around . Males guard females during the incubation period of about 35 days. Both parents care for the young through fledging at 14 weeks and beyond, sometimes until they are a year old. In captivity, coscoroba swans can live 20 years. Coscoroba swans (Coscoroba coscoroba) pair with cygnets Laguna Nimez.jpg|pair with cygnets, Argentina Coscoroba coscoroba -Mostardas, Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil -juvenile-8.jpg|Juveniles in
Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Vocalization The coscoroba swan makes an
onomatopoeic "
cos-cor-oo", usually as a threat to intruders. They also make a "monosyllabic hooting note" as a contact call between mates. Immature birds make "loud chirps and trills". ==Status==