Anseranas semipalmata
SUBFAMILY
Anseranatinae
TAXONOMY
Anas semipalmata Latham, 1798, Hawkesbury River, New South Wales, Australia. Monotypic.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Pied goose; Semipalmated goose; French: Canaroie semipalmé; German: Spaltfußgans; Spanish: Ganso Urraco.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
27.6–35.4 in (70–90 cm); female 4.4 lb (2.0 kg); male 6.2 lb (2.8 kg); webs on the toes reduced; hind toe very long.
DISTRIBUTION
Southern New Guinea and Queensland, Australia; reintroduced in Victoria, southeastern Australia.
HABITAT
Swamps and grasslands in riverine floodplains.
BEHAVIOR
Often bigamous. Parental care extensive. Gregarious.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Feeds on grasses and seeds using its feet to bend down taller plants. Also digs out roots and bulbs with its hooked bill.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Often bigamous, with one male paired with two females. One or both females lay 1-16 eggs in same nest, Feb.–Apr. in north, Aug.–Sept. in south. The nest is a mound of floating vegetation. Incubation 23–25 days; fledging c. 11 weeks; sexual maturity after two years in females and 3–4 years in males.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Size of populations increasing. Generally common in its habitat. Protected from hunting except during open season in Northern Territory, Australia.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Hunted traditionally by aboriginies. Considered a pest by rice growers.




