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The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
Male scaup North Sea off Flamborough, Yorkshire Female scaup
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Scaup

Amber conservation status

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Latin name

Aythya marila

Family

Swans, ducks and geese (Anatidae)

Overview

Scaup are diving ducks with a resemblance to tufted ducks. Males have black heads, shoulder and breast, white flanks, grey back and a black tail. Females are brown, with characteristic white patches around the base of the bill. In flight they show white patches along the length of the trailing edge of the wing. Only a handful breed in the UK every year, making them our rarest breeding duck.

Where to see them

Best looked for in winter on estuaries such as the Dee in Cheshire, the Solway Firth, the Firth of Forth and the Moray Firth. Also, look on enclosed waters such as Lough Neagh in Ireland.

When to see them

Mainly in winter, from late October to March.

What they eat

Shellfish, crustacea and small insects.

Estimated numbers

EuropeUK breeding*UK wintering*UK passage*
-1-5 pairs9,200 birds-

* UK breeding is the number of pairs breeding annually. UK wintering is the number of individuals present from October to March. UK passage is the number of individuals passing through on migration in spring and/or autumn.

Distribution

Key

Please note that the map is only intended as a guide. It shows general distribution rather than detailed, localised populations.

Audio is from commercial recordings Bird Songs and Calls of Britain and Europe on 4 CDs or Bird Sounds of Europe & North-west Africa, copyright WildSounds & CEBA (www.wildsounds.com, (UK) +44 (0) 1263 741100)

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2 illustrations

12

Illustrations
Scaup - male

Scaup - male

Scaup - female

Scaup - female

Similar birds

Tufted ducks (illustration)

Tufted duck

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© 2008 The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. Charity registered in England and Wales no 207076, in Scotland no SC037654
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Last published: 14/06/2008 02:01:03
Show/hide picture credits
Male scaup - Steve Round
North Sea off Flamborough, Yorkshire - Lawrie Phipps
Female scaup - Steve Round
Bird illustrations by Mike Langman (RSPB)