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Yellow-billed Pintail

Anas georgica
Gmelin, JF, 1789
Pato Maicero
Marreca-parda

Family: Anatidae
Order: Anseriformes
Class: Aves
Phylum / Division: Chordata
Kingdom: Animalia

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Records from Embalse El Carrizal

Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Description: It is a medium-sized duck with a slender build and elegant posture, showing finely mottled grayish-brown plumage that provides effective camouflage. The head and neck are paler with delicate streaking, while the back is darker. Its most distinctive feature is the bright yellow bill with a black tip, making it easily recognizable. The wings display a green iridescent speculum, bordered in white, visible in flight or while swimming, and the legs are grayish to yellowish.

Geographic distribution: It is widely distributed throughout South America, from southern Peru and Bolivia to southern Chile and Argentina, including Uruguay, Paraguay, southern Brazil, and the Falkland Islands. It inhabits both temperate and cold regions, showing considerable climatic adaptability.

Habitat: It occupies a wide range of freshwater and coastal wetland habitats, including lakes, marshes, lagoons, slow-flowing rivers, reservoirs, and flooded grasslands. It favors shallow waters with emergent vegetation but also uses open areas near water bodies.

Feeding: It has an omnivorous diet with a strong plant component, feeding on seeds, shoots, leaves, and roots of aquatic plants. It also consumes small invertebrates, insects, crustaceans, and occasionally mollusks. Feeding is mainly done by dabbling and filtering water.

Behavior: This is a generally calm and social species, usually seen in pairs or small groups, though larger flocks may form outside the breeding season. It is an efficient swimmer and agile flier, capable of rapid takeoff when disturbed. Vocalizations are soft and nasal, especially during courtship.

Nesting: Nesting occurs on the ground, with the nest well concealed among dense vegetation, usually close to water. The clutch typically includes 6 to 10 eggs, incubated solely by the female, while the male remains nearby during early stages. The chicks are precocial and leave the nest shortly after hatching.

Conservation status: It is classified as Least Concern, with stable populations and a broad range. However, wetland modification and localized hunting pressure may affect some populations.


Author of this compilation: EcoRegistros – 22/12/2025




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Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 608489
♂ ♀
  Adult

Embalse El Carrizal
Mendoza
Argentina
11/08/2024
Damián Carnevale
Foto
Photography ID: 450696
 
Embalse El Carrizal
Mendoza
Argentina
01/10/2021
Matias Pescara



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Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
233895504/08/2025ArgentinaMendozaCamping punta verde, Embalse El Carrizal4Pablo Moreno
218545308/11/2024ArgentinaMendozaEl carrizal, Embalse El CarrizalDamián Carnevale
200997209/03/2024ArgentinaMendozaEl carrizal, Embalse El Carrizal1Valentín González Feltrup
189456930/09/2023ArgentinaMendozaEl carrizal, Embalse El Carrizal4Pablo Moreno
189083827/09/2023ArgentinaMendozaEmbalse El Carrizal7Pablo Moreno
188561826/08/2023ArgentinaMendozaEl carrizal, Embalse El Carrizal6Pablo Moreno
175685622/04/2023ArgentinaMendozaEmbalse El Carrizal6Pablo Moreno
177693804/03/2023ArgentinaMendozaEl carrizal, Embalse El Carrizal4Valentín González Feltrup
166488929/10/2022ArgentinaMendozaEl carrizal, Embalse El Carrizal1Pablo Moreno
160812910/07/2022ArgentinaMendozaEl carrizal, Embalse El Carrizal8Pablo Moreno
Page 1

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Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Yellow-billed Pintail (Anas georgica) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 19/03/2026.