The Canvasback
is a large diving duck, 48-60 cm long and weighing 1270 g. The adult
male has a black bill, a red head and neck, a black
breast, red eyes and a whitish body. The adult female has a brown head
and body and a black bill. Their breeding habitat is North American
prairie wetlands. The bulky nest is built from vegetation in a marsh
and lined with down. Loss of nesting habitat has caused populations to
decline. Canvasbacks usually take new mates each year, pairing in late
winter. Canvasbacks are strongly migratory and overwinter on the
coasts of the United States, the Great Lakes and British Columbia in
saltwater bays, estuaries or lakes. This species is a very rare vagrant
to western Europe. Canvasbacks feed mainly by diving, sometimes
dabbling, mostly eating aquatic plants with some molluscs, aquatic
insects and small fish. Wild celery is a favourite food and is the
origin of this bird's species name. The canvasback sometimes lays eggs
in other canvasback nests. They are a strictly North American species, which is the largest of the
pochards with a long tapering bill and sloping forehead. The head has a
wedge-shaped profile. One of the fastest flying ducks, they utilize a
v-shaped formation while migrating like geese to increase efficiency.
