the male in general is more famous and beuitiful than the female!
otherwise the mallard duck ( male ) it has a green head and almost half of it neck,then fallows a white ring, then brown colour till the begging of it wings
the body is white-beige color littile brown on its wings and in the tail a black area with few white feathers.
the female is a mottled light brown, like most female dabbling ducks, and has buff cheeks, eyebrow, throat and neck with a darker crown and eye-stripe.
A male mallard is recognized by the glossy green head,and white neck ring.The chest is a dark red brown,and the body is grayish.They have a white tail,and the speculum patch on the wing is a blue violet color. Both sexes show white underwing linings in flight. Bill is yellow,the feet orange. The female is mottled brown,with orange bill and legs.The speculum patch is blue.
the female duck quacks while the male duck kreeps
No.
If the result you want is a mallard, yes. If mallards can just breed with other ducks, yes, a mallard duck can breed other breed ducks.
They are the most common type of ducks and really interesting. Mallard ducks also behave like any other birds, building cup-like nests made up of grass and leaves. Female mallard ducks usually lay around five to fourteen greenish-white eggs in each clutch, and it's the female mallard that takes care of their ducklings.
Mallard ducks are not capable of changing gender. There is no known species of duck that is capable of that.
Mallard ducks were never introduced. Mallards were the first duck ever on planet Earth.
In the continent that ducks live are in different parts like: africa, north america, etc.
None of them. But some ducks that look like they might have a mohawk are: Hooded Merganser, and Possibly a Tufted Duck. The Hooded Merganser
They are the most common type of ducks and really interesting. Mallard ducks also behave like any other birds, building cup-like nests made up of grass and leaves. Female mallard ducks usually lay around five to fourteen greenish-white eggs in each clutch, and it's the female mallard that takes care of their ducklings.
from an egg
Yes.
yes they do
Foxes, and raccoons eat young mallard ducks. Snapping turtles will also eat them. Mallard duck eggs are eaten by snakes, and crows.