Aythya is a genus of diving ducks, with twelve species currently accepted. The genus was described in 1822 by the German zoologist Friedrich Boie, with the type species being greater scaup. The name Aythya comes from the Ancient Greek word (), which referred to an unknown diving-bird.
thumb|left|A [[tufted duck in flight showing the white wingbar]]
The species are plump, compact, medium-sized ducks ranging from 37–61 cm long, 60–84 cm wingspan, and weighing 410–1600 g, with canvasback the largest, and ring-necked duck and ferruginous duck marginally the smallest. The body plumage is variably white, grey, red-brown, or black, often with a finely vermiculated pattern; in several species, the flanks are white or pale grey, the back darker grey to black, and the breast and tail black. The heads are strongly coloured in the males, orange-red in some species, and black with a green to purple sheen (structural colour) in good light; the sheen colour varies with both species and angle of light incidence – in for example greater scaup, the head has a green sheen in direct light, but a purple sheen when backlit. In females, the heads are browner, sometimes with white patterning on the face. The eye colour is also variable in males, from white in ferruginous duck (leading to its archaic name of "white-eyed pochard"), through yellow in most species, to deep red in common pochard and canvasback; in females, the eye is brown in all species. The bills are short, fairly broad, and pale blue-grey to black, usually with a small black 'nail' at the tip; the pattern of blue-grey and black is important in species identification. In flight, the wings are dark grey to black, with a white to pale grey wingbar along the primary and secondary feathers; the pattern of the wingbar (whether all-white, or all-grey, or white on the secondaries and grey on the primaries) is an important identification feature. The webbed feet, used for propulsion in both swimming and diving, are 5–7 cm long, large for the size of the birds, and dark grey to blackish in all the species.
The species occur throughout Asia, Europe, North America, Australia, New Zealand, and Madagascar, and also in the northern half of Africa primarily in winter. Small numbers also reach the far north of South America in winter. In the breeding season, they are restricted to well-vegetated freshwater lakes, while in the winter they use both freshwater lakes and sheltered saltwater bays and inlets. Hybrids regularly seen in Europe include tufted duck × common pochard, tufted duck × ring-necked duck, greater scaup × tufted duck, and common pochard × ferruginous duck; These hybrids can often resemble, and be mistaken for, other species in the genus; for example tufted duck × common pochard hybrids are easily mistaken for lesser scaup.
Breeding
The nests are hidden in dense waterside vegetation, for preference on islets which give greater security from land predators. Incubation of the [2–]6–10[–18] eggs takes 3–4 weeks, and is done entirely by the female. The ducklings fledge at around 6–7 weeks old, and are cared for primarily by the female, though the male may assist with guarding the ducklings. Zelenkov (2016) transferred the species Anas denesi Kessler (2013), known from the late Miocene of Hungary, to the genus Aythya. An undescribed prehistoric species is known only from Early Pleistocene fossil remains found at Dursunlu, Turkey; it might however be referrable to a paleosubspecies of an extant species considering its age (see also Greater scaup). Subfossils have also been found on Réunion; this Réunion pochard awaits formal description, and may prove to have been a population of the Madagascar pochard.
The Miocene "Aythya" arvernensis is now placed in Mionetta, while "Aythya" chauvirae seems to contain the remains of two species, at least one of which does not seem to be a diving duck.
See also
- Late Quaternary prehistoric birds
- List of fossil bird genera
Gallery
<gallery>
File:Canvasback pair2.jpg|Canvasback (Aythya valisineria)
File:Aythya ferina (Marek Szczepanek).jpg|Common pochard (Aythya ferina)
File:Redhead in Central Park (15369).jpg|Redhead (Aythya americana)
File:Aythya-collaris-001.jpg|Ring-necked duck (Aythya collaris)
File:Aythya australis female - Hurstville Golf Course.jpg|Female Hardhead (Aythya australis)
File:Aythya baeri cropped.jpg|Baer's pochard (Aythya baeri)
File:Moretta Tabaccata - Ferruginous Duck - Aythya nyroca.jpg|Ferruginous duck (Aythya nyroca)
File:AythyaInnotata.svg|Madagascar pochard (Aythya innotata)
File:NZ Scaup 01.jpg|New Zealand scaup (Aythya novaeseelandiae)
File:Tufted-Duck-male-female.jpg|Tufted duck (Aythya fuligula)
File:2017-03-24 Aythya marila, pair, Killingworth Lake, Northumberland 01.jpg|Greater scaup (Aythya marila)
File:AythyaAffins 2109.JPG|Lesser scaup (Aythya affinis)
</gallery>
