Non-native 'tree duck' spotted on Cornish beach

Zhara Simpson
BBC News, South West
Amal Barwell The ducks are pictured in a group together with the whistling duck a light orange colour. It is pictured in the middle area.Amal Barwell
The fulvous whistling duck, pictured left, was spotted on Par beach

A non-native duck believed to have escaped from captivity has been spotted on a Cornish beach.

Artist Amal Barwell said she feeds the ducks every morning on Par beach after her dog walks and spotted the odd one out on 17 February.

Cornwall Wildlife Trust confirmed it was a fulvous whistling duck that could have escaped from captivity.

According to online resource All About Birds, whistling ducks or "tree ducks" are normally found in warm freshwater marshes across the Americas, Africa and Asia.

Amal Barwell The ducks are pictured in a group together with the whistling duck a light orange colour. It has a black back and is facing away from where the photo was taken.Amal Barwell
The duck is normally found in warm freshwater marshes across the Americas, Africa and Asia

The ducks, which are caramel-brown and black in colour, were once called tree ducks because of their habit of roosting in trees, said All About Birds.

Ms Barwell said: "I go and feed the ducks every morning after my dog walks, they spot the car on my way in and gather waiting for when I come back.

"About one week ago, I noticed him hanging out with the [others] - first I thought they had a baby but then I noticed he looked nothing like the other and was really cute."

'Well-accepted'

She said the duck had a "high pitch whistle" and "stands up for himself".

"[He] seems well-accepted, he stays way away from me when I approach him," she said.

"He was was here today completely in his element - Par beach inspires me as an artist."

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