eagle wing tours whale watching

 




White Winged Scoter  (Melanitta fusca)

DescriptionWhite Winged Scoters are seen on a whale watching boat tour with Eagle Wing Tours in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada on Vancouver Island.

19-24" (48-61 cm). Male black with bold white wing patches, white crescents around eyes, and yellow bill with black knob at base. Females are dull brown, with 2 whitish facial spots and white wing patches.

Habitat

Breeds on large lakes; winters mainly on the ocean and on large coastal bays, but a few remain on lakes in the interior.

Nesting

5-17 buff or pink eggs in a hollow lined with sticks and down, under a bush, or in a crevice near water, often on an island in a lake.

Range

Breeds in Alaska and much of western and central Canada. Winters along coasts, from Alaska south to California and from Newfoundland south to Carolinas, rarely to Florida and Texas. Also in Eurasia.

Voice

Soft whistles and guttural croaks.

Discussion

During migration, long irregular lines consisting of thousands of White-winged Scoters move southward, just offshore and only a few feet above the waves. The most abundant and widespread of the three scoters-there are over a million in North America-this species feeds chiefly on mollusks, which it collects from mussel beds at depths of 15 to 40 feet (5 to 12 meters). These birds also feed on crabs, starfish, sea urchins, and some fish. Sociable birds, they gather in large flocks or rafts, both to feed and to sleep at night. Like all birds that dive and rest on the sea, they are vulnerable to oil spills.