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Product Description With fun activities for the whole family, like building a birdhouse and preparing your own bird food, this is a must-have beginner's guide to bird watching for a new generation! Stan Tekiela’s famous Birds of Wisconsin Field Guide has been delighting bird watchers for years. Now, the award-winning author has written the perfect bird identification guide for children! The Kids’ Guide to Birds of Wisconsin features: 86 of the most common and important birds to know Species organized by color for ease of use Full-color photographs and a full page of information for each bird Field marks, favorite hangouts, calls/songs, a range map, and Stan’s cool facts, making identification a snap! About the Author Naturalist, wildlife photographer and writer Stan Tekiela is the author of more than 175 field guides, nature books, children’s books, wildlife audio CDs, puzzles and playing cards, presenting many species of birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, trees, wildflowers and cacti in the United States. With a Bachelor of Science degree in Natural History from the University of Minnesota and as an active professional naturalist for more than 25 years, Stan studies and photographs wildlife throughout the United States and Canada. He has received various national and regional awards for his books and photographs. Also a well-known columnist and radio personality, his syndicated column appears in more than 25 newspapers and his wildlife programs are broadcast on a number of Midwest radio stations. Stan can be followed on Facebook and Twitter. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Mostly Green Mallard Look for the green head What to look for: green head with a white necklace, rusty-brown chest, gray sides, yellow bill, orange legs and feet Where you'll find them: lakes and ponds, rivers and streams, and maybe even your backyard Calls and songs: the male doesn’t quack; when you think of how a duck sounds, it’s based on the female Mallard’s classic loud quack On the move: mostly in flocks of 6–10, especially in spring; sometimes in huge flocks with hundreds of ducks What they eat: seeds, aquatic plants and insects; visits ground feeders offering corn Nest: ground; Mom builds it from plants nearby Eggs, chicks and childcare: 7–10 greenish-to-whitish eggs; Mom incubates the eggs and leads the young to food Spends the winter: doesn’t migrate in Wisconsin Stan's Cool Stuff: This is a dabbling duck, tipping forward in shallow water to eat plants on the bottom. The male has black feathers in the center of its tail that curl upward. The common name “Mallard” means “male” and refers to the males, which don’t help raise their young. REAL QUICK Size: 19-21" Nest: ground Feeder: ground Range map: year-round