The mandarin duck (Aix galericulata) is a perching duck species native to East and Northeast Asia. It is sexually dimorphic; the males are elaborately coloured, while the females have more subdued colours. In 1747 the English naturalist George Edwards included an illustration and a description of the species in the second volume of his A Natural History of Uncommon Birds. He used the English name "The Chinese teal". He based his hand-coloured etching on a live specimen kept by the merchant Matthew Decker on his estate at Richmond in Surrey. Decker was a director of the East India Company. When in 1758 the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus updated his Systema Naturae for the tenth edition, he placed the mandarin duck with the ducks and geese in the genus Anas. Linnaeus included a brief description, coined the binomial name Anas galericulata and cited the earlier publications. The mandarin duck is now placed together with the wood duck in the genus Aix that was introduced in 1828 by the German ornithologist Friedrich Boie. The species is monotypic: no subspecies are recognised. The genus name is the Ancient Greek word for an unknown diving bird mentioned by Aristotle. The specific epithet is from Latin galericulatum meaning a "peruke" or "wig".

Genetics

Mandarin duck unusually has 84 chromosomes, all acrocentric, compared to 80, often submetacentric, for other ducks; this makes successful hybridisation with other ducks very difficult, and possibly impossible, though this is disputed. Hybrids have been reported with six other duck species, but none of these have yet been verified.). The female is similar to the female wood duck, with greyish-brown plumage, and a slender white eye-ring and stripe running back from the eye. The female is paler on the underside, has a small white flank stripe, and a pale tip to its bill. The Asian populations are migratory, overwintering in lowland eastern China and southern Japan. However this has now been reinterpreted as an indeterminate member of Anatinae.

Specimens frequently escape from collections, and in the 20th century, a large, feral population was established in Great Britain; more recently, small numbers have bred in Ireland, concentrated in the parks of Dublin. Now, about 7,000 are in Britain. Owing to its different habitat preferences compared to native water birds, the mandarin duck appears to have had no negative impacts on native wildfowl as a result of its introduction to the UK, as it does not engage in competition with other ducks over their habitats and occupies a previously-vacant ecological niche; it is generally not considered to be invasive. However, its expanding range means that it may compete with common goldeneye (Bucephala clangula), which also nests in trees.

Additional populations of mandarin ducks can be found on the European continent, the largest of which is in the region of Berlin. but when accustomed to humans may exhibit bolder behaviour.

Breeding

thumb|right|A mother with ducklings in [[Beijing, China]]

In the wild, mandarin ducks breed in densely wooded areas near shallow lakes, marshes or ponds. They nest in cavities in trees close to water during the spring. A single clutch of nine to twelve eggs is laid in April or May. Although the male may defend the brooding female and his eggs during incubation, he himself does not incubate the eggs and leaves before they hatch. Shortly after the ducklings hatch, their mother flies to the ground and coaxes the ducklings to leap from the nest. After all of the ducklings are out of the tree, they will follow their mother to a nearby body of water. small worms, small fish, frogs, mollusks, and small snakes. Typically, Mandarin ducks lay their eggs in nests of their own relatives or other bird species. In the Zuojia Nature Reserve in Northeast China, 46.1% of Mandarin ducks were found to practice conspecific brood parasitism. When females practice this behavior, they can benefit from a decrease in the costs from parental care and incubation.

While there was speculation that larger clutch sizes can lead to an increase in resource competition, research has found that the number of parasite eggs had no negative influence on the success of eggs from the host. Over generations, conspecific brood parasitism can increase the net number of offsprings found within each generation. Overall, other duck species that have utilised this behaviour to lay their eggs were able to increase their reproductive success by more than double.

In culture

Chinese culture

thumb|left|A [[Yuan dynasty porcelain teapot representing a mandarin duck pair]]

thumb|Porcelain winepot in the form of a mandarin duck, decorated in overglaze enamels, [[Qing dynasty, circa 1760]]

The Chinese refer to mandarin ducks as (), where () and () respectively stand for male and female mandarin ducks. In traditional Chinese culture, mandarin ducks are believed to be lifelong couples, unlike other species of ducks. Hence they are regarded as a symbol of conjugal affection and fidelity, and are frequently featured in Chinese art.

A Chinese proverb for loving couples uses the mandarin duck as a metaphor: "Two mandarin ducks playing in water" (). A mandarin duck symbol is also used in Chinese weddings because in traditional Chinese lore, they symbolize wedded bliss and fidelity. Because the male and female plumages of the mandarin duck are so unalike, is frequently used colloquially in Cantonese to mean an "odd couple" or "unlikely pair" – a mixture of two different types of the same category; for example, the drink and fried rice. Mandarin ducks featured on the flag of Weihaiwei during British rule.

Korean culture

For Koreans, mandarin ducks represent peace, fidelity, and plentiful offspring. Similar to the Chinese, they believe that these ducks mate for life. For these reasons, pairs of wooden-carved mandarin ducks called wedding ducks are often given as wedding gifts and play a significant role in Korean marriage.

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File:Aix galericulata (wild living in Warsaw).JPG|Mandarin Drake at Łazienki Park, Poland

File:Mating Mandarin Ducks.jpg|Mating Pair at Rotterdam's Blijdorp Zoo, Netherlands.

File:Aix galericulata MHNT.ZOO.2010.11.27.5.jpg|Eggs

File:Mandarin duckling 800.jpg|Duckling at Osterley Park, London

File:Pair of Mandarin Ducks, Metropolitan Museum of Art.jpg|A pair of Incense boxes shaped like mandarin ducks

File:The Detailed Sailed Drake.jpg|The Sail feathers of a Mandarin duck from the Alojamientos y Recreo Romero, Perú

File:Aix galericulata male portrait.jpg|Portrait of a male at Martin Mere, England

File:Samiec kaczki mandarynki z samicą kaczki krzyżówki.jpg|Mandarin Drake alongside a Female Mallard in Stara Iwiczna, Poland

</gallery>

References

Further reading

  • RSPB Birds by Name — Mandarin Duck
  • Mandarin Duck Research Pages – Birkbeck, University of London
  • Mandarin Duck Research