The three scoters on these two pages are sea ducks, wintering on open coastal waters. [Please select]
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Like all scoters, these birds move along our coasts in loose flocks, stringing into irregular, wavy lines. [Please select]
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The two preserved specimens from Kansas supposedly of this species are actually Surf Scoters. [Please select]
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All except the scoters are frequenters of the mountain lakes, fresh-water ponds and overflows. [Please select]
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As on the South Coast of Devon or Dorset, a few scattered Scoters--non-breeding birds, of course--remain throughout the summer. [Please select]
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Drakes can be distinguished from other scoters by two white patches on their head and the bright color of the bill. [Please select]
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Scoters feed on mollusks, crabs, and some fish and very little vegetation. [Please select]
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Like the other Scoters, this species often feeds in very deep water. [Please select]
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At Lake Schrader (July 27, 1952), 15 scoters, in loose groups of two to six, fed in the southwest corner of the lake. [Please select]
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Scoters or "Coots" as they are generally called are sea ducks whose plumage is almost wholly black; they have fantastically colored and shaped bills. [Please select]
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