Also known as Melanitta fusca
espécie de ave
A Velvet Scoter is a type of diving duck found in northern waters across the Northern Hemisphere. It matters to wildlife enthusiasts and conservationists because it's an important species for understanding ocean ecosystems and waterfowl populations in cold-water regions.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
velvet scoter
Species
A medium-sized duck (21 inches), the male White-winged Scoter is most easily identified by its black body, white wing patches, and white eye-stripes. The female is dark brown rather than black, but retains this species’ characteristic white wing patches. Duck hunters often refer to scoters as “coots,” although their resemblance to “real” coots is limited to their shared dark body pattern and is entirely superficial. The White-winged Scoter inhabits a large part of the Northern Hemisphere. In the New World, this species breeds in western Canada and Alaska, wintering along the Pacific coast from Alaska south to Baja California, on the Atlantic coast from Newfoundland south to northern Florida, and along the Gulf coast from Florida to Texas. In the Old World (where it is known as the Velvet Scoter), this species breeds in northern Europe and Siberia, wintering along the coast of Western Europe and East Asia. White-winged Scoters breed in ponds and lakes in northern forest near the tree line at the edge of the tundra. In winter, this species may be found in saltwater estuaries, bays, and near-shore waters along the coast. White-winged Scoters primarily eat bottom-dwelling mollusks and
via IUCN
A negrola-de-asa-branca-europeia (Melanitta fusca) é uma espécie de ave anseriforme da família dos anatídeos que nidifica na Escandinávia e Rússia Europeia e inverna no Mar Báltico e nas costas da Europa Ocidental. É considerada uma espécie vulnerável devido à redução de 30-46% dos indivíduos nas últimas três gerações. A população global está estimada em 200-400 mil indivíduos. Em Portugal é raramente avistada, nomeadamente na ria de Aveiro.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).