To Solve the Mallard’s Mysterious Decline, Researchers Turn to Hi-Tech Trackers

Biologists are using the devices to better understand the bird's behavior and, ultimately, what might be driving our most common duck's population drop.
A female mallard is harnessed with a tracking device.
Biologists are using familiar health-tracking technology to unlock the mystery of why our most common duck is declining. Photo: Troy Gipps/Massachusetts Wildlife

Mallards seem to be everywhere. They gather in parks and ponds, forage in farm fields, and even nest in urban planter boxes. This flexibility has helped make Mallards the most common ducks in North America.

And yet, while waterfowl populations overall have grown in the past few decades, Mallard numbers have declined by an estimated 20 percent since 1998, according to annual surveys. In the stretch of the Atlantic Flyway from New Hampshire to Virginia, the losses have been more than twice that. For such an adaptable species to undergo such a precipitous drop is troubling, says John Coluccy, 颅director of conservation planning at Ducks Unlimited. 鈥淚t indicates that something鈥檚 going on that we need to be paying attention to.鈥

In 2021, seeking to understand the trend and find ways to 颅reverse it, scientists launched the , an expansive research effort spanning 14 states and 3 Canadian provinces. The undertaking is 颅ambitious both in its scale鈥22 government, university, and nonprofit organizations are involved鈥攁nd in the sheer quantity of information it aims to amass: tens of millions of data points, when all is said and done. 鈥淚t is truly remarkable,鈥 says Mitch Weegman, a University of Saskatchewan biologist who co-leads the project. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not common that you have several hundred people working on the same problem.鈥

The goal is to create an extraordinarily detailed picture of Mallard behavior.

The goal is to create an extraordinarily detailed picture of Mallard behavior and see how decisions made by individual birds鈥攕uch as when and where to migrate or build a nest鈥攎ight contribute to falling reproduction. To do so, the biologists turned to the same behavior-tracking technology many people use to monitor their health. Just as smartwatches help gauge our sleep and trace our daily activity, transmitters 颅affixed to the ducks provide 颅updates on each bird鈥檚 activity every 10 minutes. So far the team has put trackers on nearly 1,200 Mallards, tagging only females to follow their nesting behavior. Weegman says he鈥檚 unaware of any other animal study that has netted such a staggering volume of data from so many individuals.

Capturing and tagging all those birds was no small feat鈥攁nd it was just the first step. Next the scientists had to figure out what the movement data meant. To translate the squiggles and dots from the transmitters into real-life Mallard behaviors, University of Saskatchewan graduate student Cassidy Waldrep used computer models to identify patterns that 颅indicate when a tagged bird is flying, feeding, preening, or resting. The team is confident that the models are accurate because they鈥檝e observed tagged Mallards in captivity to ensure that their reading of the data matches the birds鈥 behavior. In nesting season, they also use a drone with a heat-sensing camera to locate a small sample of tagged Mallards and confirm which transmitter patterns correspond to birds that are actively brooding.

Though it鈥檚 too soon to say for certain what is causing the decline, one likely factor has emerged. Daria Sparks, a graduate student at SUNY Brockport, has found that a surprisingly high proportion of the tagged birds don鈥檛 migrate. The team is still unpacking the reasons why, but evidence suggests the 颅answer might involve genetics. Since the 1940s, sportsmen鈥檚 clubs and others have released an estimated 1.8 million farm-raised Mallards for hunting. Today hybrid birds, the result of decades of 颅domestic ducks mating with wild ones, make up more than 90 percent of the eastern Mallard population.

What鈥檚 concerning are startling differences in behavior between wild and hybrid birds, revealed by 2022 research conducted in the Great Lakes region (which was unrelated to the Atlantic Flyway project). Compared to hybrids, the wild Mallards in that study were less likely to use urban environments, twice as likely to migrate, and three times more likely to incubate a nest. 

鈥淚t was pretty eye-opening as to how much those movement behaviors were related to bird genetics,鈥 says Benjamin Luukkonen, a biologist with the Michigan Department of Natural Resources who as a graduate student at Michigan State University.

The Atlantic Flyway researchers plan to continue tracking Mallards through 2027, at which point they hope they鈥檒l be able to offer wildlife managers a clearer understanding of how to help the species recover. If birds that breed in rural marshes hatch more chicks than those in suburban parks, for instance, then restoring more wetlands could be a key strategy. Their findings may also help explain why Mallards that breed from Maine north into 颅Canada continue to grow in numbers while their neighbors to the south dwindle鈥攁 disparity that could hold lessons for conservation.

Sorting out where the problem lies is only becoming more urgent.

Sorting out where the problem lies is only becoming more urgent. Buoyed by expanded wetland protections, ducks had been a recent bright spot amid otherwise dismal avian population trends in the United States. But the latest 鈥淪tate of the Birds鈥 report, published in March by a coalition of science and conservation groups, including 约炮视频, showed that duck populations have declined significantly in the past few years鈥攁 reversal likely due in large part to drought in the Prairie Pothole Region of the northern Great Plains, where millions of them breed.

As scientists and conservationists seek ways to help Mallards and other waterfowl rebound, the vast trove of data from the Atlantic Flyway project could prove invaluable, Coluccy says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be mined for a very long time.鈥

This story originally ran in the Summer 2025 issue as 鈥淢allards in Motion.鈥 To receive our print magazine, become a member by .