Male green-winged teals are easily recognizable for their wide, dark green stripe on their heads. In North America, they are the smallest dabbling duck, or ducks that primarily eat from the surface of the water instead of diving.

Physical Description

Green-winged teals are small ducks named for the dark green coloration on their forewing, which can be seen when their wings are extended. This patch of color is known as a wing speculum. 

Adult males are easy to distinguish from other ducks by the wide, dark green stripe on their heads. They have gray bodies with a narrow white stripe on their shoulders. Females’ bodies are mottled brown. They have a narrow black stripe around their eye and a smaller black strip around their bills.

Size

About the size of a crow, green-winged teals are just over a foot long (31 to 39 centimeters) with a wingspan that measures between 20.5 and 23 inches (52 to 59 centimeters). Both males and females can weigh anywhere between 5 and 17.5 ounces.

Native Habitat

Green-winged teals are found throughout North America, often in wetlands but occasionally forests and scrublands. They winter in southwestern Canada through Mexico and the Caribbean Islands from late fall to early spring. Then, these ducks fly north for their breeding season. They breed in the northern portion of North America from Alaska through Canada.

There is a small population of green-winged teals on the Aleutian Islands in Alaska that are non-migratory. 

Lifespan

Green-winged teals can live up to 20 years.

Communication

Green-winged teals make a high-pitched tweeting vocalization that sounds like someone quickly blowing a sports whistle. 

They have some of the most elaborate mating “dances” of all ducks. Males exhibit a broad range of vocalizations, head bobs and swimming patterns to attract a female. He will rear out of the water while vocalizing and then bring up his green wings while raising his tail.

Food/Eating Habits

Ducks who primarily eat from the surface of the water instead of diving, are known as dabbling ducks. Green-winged teals are the smallest dabbling ducks in North America. 

These ducks primarily eat plant materials, including grasses and pondweeds. They will also eat aquatic insects, crustaceans, mollusks and tadpoles. There is some variation in their diet depending on the season and their location. For example, green-winged teals may feed on more seeds in the winter and more animal matter in the summer. 

Social Structure

Small flocks of green-winded teals travel to winter and breeding grounds. Due to their small size, these ducks are fast fliers, capable of reaching speeds of 50 miles per hour. The flock will rapidly twist and turn in unison as they fly. Mated pairs of green-winged teals usually arrive at the breeding grounds together. Winter grounds and migration stopovers may see green-winged teals gathering in the thousands.

Reproduction and Development

Green-winged teals’ nest sites are usually well hidden and within 200 feet of water. The female will look for a spot with a dense cover that forms a canopy overhead. Once she chooses the nest site, she builds the nest, filling a shallow depression with grasses, twigs and leaves. She then lines it with down feathers.

Green-winged teals lay an average of six to nine eggs. Once the nest is made and the female has begun incubating the eggs, the male leaves. Incubation lasts about 21 days. The newly hatched ducklings can leave the nest, walk and swim within a few hours. While the chicks forage for their food, mother green-winged teals will continue to warm and protect any ducklings who return to the nest at night and when the weather turns cold. Ducklings fledge at just over a month, or around 35 days, old.

Conservation Efforts

Green-winged teals are currently listed as a species of least concern. Their population numbers have increased over the past five decades and appear to continue on an upward trend. Their breeding sites in Canada and Alaska are mostly inaccessible, protecting these ducks from habitat loss. Additionally, hunting limits of individual species are updated annually to help safeguard against population declines.

Animal News

Ducks of Our Lives

March 25, 2024

#GorillaStory: I’ll Have What Mom’s Having

March 18, 2024

Meet Our Addax Calf

February 29, 2024