Evidence for mallard Anas platyrhynchos and American black duck Anas rubripes competition in western New Brunswick, Canada / Mark J. Petrie, Ronald D. Drobney, Dan T. Sears, and Llwellyn M. Armstrong.
Material type: TextSeries: Wildfowl. 62 146-164 Publication details: 2012.Description: 28 cmLOC classification:- PET
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 162-164).
The hypothesis that Mallard Anas platyrhynchos and American Black Duck Anas rubripes
compete during the breeding period has generated considerable debate. To further
evaluate this hypothesis, the following predictions were tested for sympatric Mallard
and Black Duck breeding in New Brunswick: 1) Mallard and Black Duck do not
partition breeding resources in space and/or time, 2) Mallard reduce the amount of
breeding habitat available to Black Duck, and 3) production of Mallard and Black
Duck is inversely related over time. Study results supported all predictions. Mallard
and Black Duck pairs were distributed among wetland classes independent of
species, though Black Duck were more likely to be observed alone or without Mallard
on wetlands that were surrounded by > 75% upland forest. Mallard and Black Duck
hatch dates did not differ, indicating they do not temporally partition breeding
resources. Black Duck were more likely to be observed on wetlands where Mallard
had been removed than on wetlands where they were not removed. This result
supported the prediction that Mallard reduce the availability of breeding habitat for
Black Duck through interference competition. To test the prediction that production
of Mallard and Black Duck is inversely related over time, brood surveys were
conducted from 1990 to 1994 to determine relative and absolute changes in numbers
of Mallard and Black Duck broods. The ratio of Black Duck to Mallard broods
declined from 0.938 in 1990 to 0.244 in 1994. Total number of Black Duck broods
on 59 wetlands surveyed with equal effort in 1990 and 1994 declined from 45 in 1990
to 19 in 1994, while Mallard broods increased from 48 in 1990 to 78 in 1994. These
findings support the hypothesis that Mallard and Black Duck compete.