|
Mallard ducklings don’t make good Easter
presents
March 17, 2008
Contact: Tony Young, 850-488-7867
With Easter approaching, many parents contemplate
purchasing mallard ducklings as gifts for their children. The
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) suggests buying
your child the stuffed-animal version instead.
“Although these ducklings might make nice pets while
they’re young, they can live 10 years and quickly outgrow the
cute-and-fuzzy stage, leaving full-size droppings on your patio and
outdoor furniture,” FWC waterfowl management coordinator Diane Eggeman
said. “When this happens, parents and children often grow tired of
caring for them and decide to turn them loose into the wild.”
They may not realize this is illegal and puts Florida’s
native wildlife in jeopardy. By law, no one may possess, buy or
sell mallards in Florida without a special permit from the FWC, and
releasing them is prohibited.
These activities are against the law because
domesticated ducks, once released, are capable of transmitting diseases,
and they compete with native wildlife for food and habitat. Most
importantly, releasing mallards threatens the existence of the Florida
mottled duck, a unique subspecies found only in peninsular Florida.
“These domesticated mallards are interbreeding with the
mottled duck, producing hybrid offspring,” Eggeman said. “This is
a serious concern and if not stopped, this hybridization could result in
the Florida mottled duck becoming extinct.”
Pet mallards will not migrate when they are released.
They become established, year-round residents of our state. When
they mate with wild mottled ducks, it pushes Florida’s mottled ducks
closer toward extinction.
The Florida mottled duck population is relatively small,
and already FWC biologists are saying as many as 12 percent of these
ducks are showing genetic evidence of hybridization.
Today, the future of the mottled duck is uncertain, but
its fate is in the hands of Floridians. The solution starts with
not buying your child a live duckling for Easter.
For more information on protecting Florida’s mottled
duck, contact one of the FWC’s waterfowl offices at 850-488-5878 or
321-726-2862, or click
MyFWC.com/duck/mottled.
|