The shelducks, most species of which are found in the genus Tadorna, are a group of large birds in the Tadorninae subfamily of the Anatidae, the biological family that includes the ducks and most duck-like waterfowl such as the geese and swans.
Biology
Shelducks are a group of large, often semi-terrestrial waterfowl, which can be seen as intermediate between geese and ducks. They are mid-sized Old World waterfowl. The sexes are colored slightly differently in most species, and all have a characteristic upperwing coloration in flight: the tertiary remiges form a green speculum, the secondaries and primaries are black, and the coverts are white. Their diet consists of small shore animals as well as grasses and other plants. They were originally known as "sheldrakes", which remained the most common name until the late 19th century. The word is still sometimes used to refer to a male shelduck and can also occasionally refer to the canvasback of North America.
Systematics
The genus name comes from the French nameTadorne for the common shelduck. It may originally derive from Celtic roots meaning "pied waterfowl", essentially the same as the English "shelduck". A group of them is called a "dopping," taken from the Harley Manuscript. The namesake genus of the Tadorninae, Tadorna is very close to the Egyptian goose and its extinct relatives from the Madagascar region, Alopochen. While the classical shelducks form a group that is obviously monophyletic, the interrelationships of these, the aberrant common and especially Radjah sheducks, and the Egyptian goose were found to be poorly resolved by mtDNA cytochrome bsequencedata; this genus may thus be paraphyletic.
The Radjah sheduck, formerly placed in the genus Tadorna, is now placed in its own monotypic genus:
Radjah shelduck
Fossil bones from Dorkovo described as Balcanas pliocaenica may actually belong to this genus. They have even been proposed to be referable to the common shelduck, but their Early Pliocene age makes this rather unlikely.
Phylogeny
Based on the Taxonomy in Flux from John Boyd's website.