THE BIRDS
CINNAMON TEAL. Querquedula cyanoptera (Vieillot)
Field characters.Small
for a duck; wing with a large blue patch on forward part. Male (except
in mid-summer, when like female): Entire head and whole under surface
rich chestnut brown; upper surface streaked with light and dark brown.
Female: Upper surface dark brown with lighter feather edgings; breast
and under surface mottled on a light brown ground.
Occurrence.Summer
visitant along both bases of the Sierras. Noted at Mono Lake, September
20, 1915, and May 30 and June 3, 1916.
Cinnamon Teal are more likely to be found in the
Yosemite region during the summer season than any other species of duck.
As they breed at Laws, Inyo County, not far southeast of Mono Lake, they
probably nest also at Mono Lake itself. The bright chestnut or deep
cinnamon plumage of the male makes him easy to identify even at a long
distance. A flock of twenty-five was noted on September 20, 1915, not on
Mono Lake proper, but in a small lagoon formed by a barrier beach at the
edge of the main body of water. Presumably they were in quest of
brine-shrimps. Like the Mallard; these birds feed by 'tipping up.'
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