No
A female mallard is called a Susie :)
A Mallard hen is called a Susie. I am a hunter and hunter safety instructor.
'Mallard' is a species of duck and therefore there are both male (drake) and female (hen) mallards.
Mallard is a type of male duck - drake Actually, the correct answer is a mallard can be either male or female. The male is called a drake; the female is called a hen.
A male duck is a drake, a female duck is a mallard and a baby duck is called a duckling.
The female of all duck species is duck although people dealing every day with ducks in general will often call them hens or females to avoid confusion. The male is called a Mallard Drake.
To get things straight, ducks aren't nocturnal so NO they don't leave their nests at night. 1) The mallard duck is a single hen (mother duck). Single mothers are the most common in mallard duck families in which the mother duck stays in her nest for hours to secure her eggs. She does leave but only for 3 minutes to grab herself some food and then rushing back to her nest. 2) The mallard duck is a hen whose mate the drake (father duck) will feed her so that she does not have to leave the nest while the eggs have yet to hatch. In these rare families containing both parents, the drake will feed her until the ducklings emerge. However, if the mother decides that she needs to go feed herself instead of heavily relying on the drake then she will leave the nest for temporary like the single hen without the drake. If you're wondering about the eggs, the drake will secure them during her absence.
A Campbell is a mallard derivative so yes it can cross with a muscovy. All wild mallards and domestic mallard derivatives can cross with any Muscovy Duck. However the offspring will be sterile (except extremely rare cases). Muscovy drake on mallard hen generates mullards which are fast-growing birds bred for meat. There are large industrial concerns that do this.
Mallards are ducks. The male is known as a drake and the female is called a hen; the flocks are called sords when they are in flight. They are common in North American, Europe and Asia.The mallard is capable of cross-breeding with many other species. They are also the ancestor of most domestic ducks.
Donald Duck is a duck and wise little hen is a hen.
A female duck may also be reffered to as a hen.
A female duck is called a duck or a hen as a male is called a drake