The northern shoveler (; Spatula clypeata), often known simply as the shoveler where other related species do not occur, is a common and widespread duck. It breeds in northern areas of Europe and throughout the Palearctic and across most of North America, A molecular phylogentic study comparing mitochondrial DNA sequences published in 2009 found that the genus Anas, as defined at the time, was not monophyletic. The genus was subsequently split into four monophyletic genera with 10 species, including the northern shoveler, moved to the revived genus Spatula. This genus had been originally proposed by the German zoologist Friedrich Boie in 1822. The name Spatula is the Latin for a "spoon" or "spatula". The specific epithet is derived from Latin clypeata, "shield-bearing" (from clypeus, "shield").
No living subspecies are recognised today. Fossil bones of a very similar duck have been found in Early Pleistocene deposits at Dursunlu, Turkey, but how these birds were related to the northern shoveler of today is unclear, whether the differences observed are due to being a related species or paleosubspecies, or attributable to individual variation. white breast, and chestnut belly and flanks, and a black or very dark grey bill. In flight, pale blue forewing feathers are revealed, separated from the green speculum by a white border. In early autumn, the male has a white crescent on each side of the face.
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File:Bommer Weiher - Erpel der Löffelente.jpg|Male, Bommer Weiher, Switzerland
File:Northern Shoveler-Anas clypeata female.jpg| Female, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
File:NorthernShovelernonbreeding.jpg|A male northern shoveler in nonbreeding plumage
File:Northernshoveler-Chilika.jpg|Male, still partly in eclipse plumage, in flight, showing the blue forewing and green speculum; Chilika Lake, Odisha, India
File:Male northern shoveler in flight-0208.jpg|Male northern shoveler in Butte County, California
File:Northern Shoveler (Spatula clypeata).jpg|Pair in flight, showing the female's grey forewing and dull speculum compared to the male's pale blue forewing and bright speculum, Renfrew, Scotland
File:Northern shoveler pair in Marine Park (33233).jpg|A pair foraging together in New York City
File:SpatulaClypeataIUCN2019 2Europa.jpg|European distribution:
File:Anas clypeata MWNH 1990.JPG|Eggs, in the Museum Wiesbaden collection
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Behaviour
thumb|Groups of northern shovelers swim rapidly in circles to collect food from the surface by creating a funnel effect.
Northern shovelers feed by dabbling for plant food, often by swinging their bills from side to side and using the bill to strain food from the water. They use their highly specialised bills (from which their name is derived) to forage for aquatic invertebrates. Their wide, flat bill is equipped with well-developed lamellae – small, comb-like structures on the edge of the bill that act like sieves, allowing the birds to skim crustaceans and plankton from the surface of the water. This adaptation, which is more specialised in shovelers, gives them an advantage over other dabbling ducks, with which they do not have to compete for food resources for most of the year. As a result, mud-bottomed marshes rich in invertebrates are their habitat of choice. Drakes are very territorial during the breeding season and defend their territory and mates from competing males. Drakes also engage in elaborate courtship displays, both on the water and in the air; not uncommonly, a dozen or more males maypursue a single hen. Despite their stocky appearance, shovelers are nimble fliers. and other areas. Those wintering in the Indian subcontinent make the taxing journey over the Himalayas, often taking a break in wetlands just south of the Himalayas before continuing further south to warmer regions. In North America, it winters south of a line from Washington to Idaho and from New Mexico east to Kentucky, also along the Eastern Seaboard as far north as Massachusetts. but it is better known as a winter visitor; it is more common in southern and eastern England, especially around the Ouse Washes, the Humber, and the North Kent Marshes, and in much smaller numbers in Scotland and western parts of England. It breeds across most of Ireland, but the population there is very difficult to assess. Surveys in 2017 and 2018 suggest that it is more common and widespread in Ireland than previously thought. In winter, British and Irish breeding birds may move south, and are joined or replaced by an influx of continental and Icelandic birds from further north.
It is strongly migratory and mostly winters further south than its breeding range. It has occasionally been reported as a vagrant as far south as Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa.
External links
- Shoveler at RSPB Birds by Name
- Northern Shoveler Species Account – Cornell Lab of Ornithology
- Northern Shoveler - Anas clypeata - USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter
- Northern Shoveler Species Account at Massachusetts Breeding Bird Atlas
- Northern Shoveler on the Birds of India
