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  2. Duck as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duck_as_food

    In cooking and gastronomy, duck or duckling is the meat of several species of bird in the family Anatidae, found in both fresh and salt water. Duck is eaten in many cuisines around the world. It is a high-fat, high-protein meat rich in iron. Duckling nominally comes from a juvenile animal, but may be simply a menu name.

  3. Duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duck

    A duckling is a young duck in downy plumage [1] or baby duck, [2] but in the food trade a young domestic duck which has just reached adult size and bulk and its meat is still fully tender, is sometimes labelled as a duckling. A male is called a drake and the female is called a duck, or in ornithology a hen. [3] [4] Male mallard. Wood ducks.

  4. Muscovy duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscovy_duck

    Cairina moschata domestica head detail. All Muscovy ducks have long claws on their feet and a wide, flat tail. In the domestic drake (male), length is about 86 cm (34 in) and weight is 4.6–6.8 kg (10–15 lb), while the domestic hen (female) is much smaller, at 64 cm (25 in) in length and 2.7–3.6 kg (6.0–7.9 lb) in weight.

  5. American Pekin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Pekin

    Pekin duckling. The American Pekin is large and solidly built. The body is rectangular as seen from the side and is held at about 40º to the horizontal; the tail projects above the line of the back. [2]: 93 [16] The breast is smooth and broad and does not show a pronounced keel. The head is large and rounded, and the neck is thick.

  6. Common merganser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_merganser

    The female lays 6–17 (most often 8–12) white to yellowish eggs, and raises one brood in a season. The ducklings are taken by their mother on her back to rivers or lakes immediately after hatching, where they feed on freshwater invertebrates and small fish fry, fledging when 60–70 days old. The young are sexually mature at the age of two ...

  7. Domestic duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_duck

    Domestic ducks appear from whole-genome sequencing to have originated from a single domestication event of mallards during the Neolithic, followed by rapid selection for lineages favouring meat or egg production.

  8. Wood duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_duck

    Wood ducks feed by dabbling (feeding from the surface rather than diving underwater) or grazing on land. They mainly eat berries, acorns, and seeds, but also insects, making them omnivores. [17] They are able to crush acorns after swallowing them within their gizzard. [21] [22]

  9. Balut (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balut_(food)

    A balut is a fertilized bird egg (usually a duck) which is incubated for a period of 14 to 21 days, depending on the local culture, and then steamed. The contents are eaten directly from the shell. Balut that is incubated for longer periods have a well-developed embryo and the features of the duckling are recognizable.