The Cinnamon teal (Spatula cyanoptera) is a small dabbling duckspecies native to the Americas, distinguished by the adult male's rich cinnamon-redplumage on the head, neck, breast, and underparts during the breeding season, accented by a bright blue shoulder patch and red eyes.[1] In contrast, females and immatures exhibit mottled brown plumage for camouflage, with a similar but duller blue wing patch.[1] Measuring 36–43 cm in length, with a wingspan of 54–57 cm and weight of 335–401 g, it is one of the smaller North American ducks, adapted for agile foraging in shallow waters.[1]This species occupies freshwater and brackish wetlands, including marshes, ponds, and lakes fringed with emergent vegetation such as rushes, sedges, and cattails, primarily in western North America and disjunct populations in South America.[2] The North American subspecies (S. c. septentrionalium) breeds from southern British Columbia and Alberta southward through the Great Basin and California to Mexico, undertaking short migrations to winter in the southwestern United States and central Mexico, often departing breeding areas in late summer (August–September) and returning in spring (March–April).[3] South American populations, represented by other subspecies, are more sedentary and occur from Colombia to southern Argentina, including Andean and coastal regions.[4] An omnivorous feeder, the Cinnamon teal dabbles or tips up in shallow water (typically less than 20 cm deep) to consume seeds and stems of aquatic plants, insects, snails, crustaceans, and zooplankton, occasionally diving for prey.[4][5]Breeding is seasonally monogamous, with males performing elaborate courtship displays including head-pumping and wing-flapping to attract females; pairs form in late winter on migration or wintering grounds.[4] Females alone construct cup-shaped nests of grasses and down in dense cover near water, laying clutches of 4–16 eggs that incubate for about 23–24 days, after which precocial ducklings are led to water and fledge in 6–7 weeks.[4] The global population is estimated at 380,000 mature individuals and is suspected to be decreasing slowly (as of 2021), with North American breeding numbers estimated at 260,000–300,000 individuals, classified as Least Concern by the IUCN due to its wide range (as of 2021), though wetland degradation and predation remain key threats. Recent surveys in North America indicate stability or increases in some regions.[6][3]
Description
Plumage
The Cinnamon Teal (Spatula cyanoptera) exhibits pronounced sexual dimorphism in its plumage, with males displaying vibrant coloration during the breeding season to attract mates, while females and non-breeding males adopt more cryptic brown tones for camouflage in wetland habitats.[1][7]Adult males in breeding (alternate) plumage feature a rich cinnamon-red head, neck, breast, flanks, and belly, providing a striking overall rusty appearance accented by darker brown upperparts with subtle pale edging and blackish speckling on the back.[8][3] The tail is black, and the undertail coverts are blackish, contrasting with the bright red eyes and a blue-gray bill tipped with a black nail.[8][9] A key identifying feature is the iridescent green speculum on the secondaries, bordered by a white leading edge and flanked by pale blue upper secondary coverts, visible in flight or when wings are spread.[8][3]In eclipse (basic) plumage, acquired post-breeding, males resemble females but retain diagnostic cinnamon tones on the underparts, along with the red eyes and a somewhat brighter speculum, creating a mottled brownish overall appearance that aids in concealment during the vulnerable flightless period.[10][8]Adult females, in contrast, show mottled brown plumage throughout, with a pale brown head and neck featuring indistinct dark eye lines, crown markings, and a subtle pale loral spot and eye ring; the back and flanks are darker brown with fine markings, while the breast and belly are paler brown to whitish.[8][10] Their bill is grayish-brown, eyes brown, tail dark brown, and undertail coverts grayish-brown, with the speculum similar to the male's but duller and less vibrant.[8][3]Juveniles closely resemble adult females but are duller overall, with finer spotting and less contrast in the facial pattern, transitioning to adult-like plumage through additional molts in their first year.[8][7] The speculum's iridescent green patch, present in both sexes across all ages, serves as a shared structural feature for species recognition during flight.[1][3]Adult Cinnamon Teals undergo two annual molts: a post-breeding pre-basic molt in late summer, rendering males flightless for several weeks as they replace flight feathers, and a pre-breeding pre-alternate molt in late winter to early spring that restores the vibrant breeding plumage.[7] First-year birds complete an additional molt, allowing progression from juvenile to adult patterns.[7]South American subspecies exhibit duller plumage tones and slight size reductions compared to the North American S. c. septentrionalium.[1]Identification of Cinnamon Teals can be challenging, particularly for females and eclipse males, which closely resemble female Blue-winged Teals (Spatula discors); however, the Cinnamon Teal's larger, more spatulate bill, warmer cinnamon undertones, and plainer facial pattern—lacking the Blue-winged's distinct white loral crescent and sharp eye line—provide key distinctions.[10][8][1]
Size and measurements
The Cinnamon teal (Spatula cyanoptera) is a small dabbling duck measuring 36–43 cm (14–17 in) in total length, with males averaging 38.4–42.8 cm and females 36–42.3 cm.[1] Its wingspan is 54–57 cm (21–23 in).[1] The species exhibits minimal sexual dimorphism in size, with females averaging 5–10% smaller than males across linear measurements such as length and wing chord.[11]Adults weigh 335–450 g (11.8–15.9 oz), with males 335–401 g and females 315–400 g; weights vary by subspecies and region, with northern populations (S. c. septentrionalium) around 362 g for males and 364 g for females.[1][11] The bill is relatively long for a teal, measuring 3.5–4.2 cm from the nares to tip (35–42 mm), with a culmen length of about 44–45 mm; it is broader (15–16 mm at base) and 7–10% longer than in the Blue-winged teal (Spatula discors).[11] Legs are short, with tarsus lengths of 3.1–3.5 cm (31–35 mm), and the feet are fully webbed for efficient dabbling foraging.[11]Compared to related species, the Cinnamon teal is notably smaller than the Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), which reaches 50–65 cm in length and 1,000–1,300 g in weight, but similar in overall dimensions to the Blue-winged teal (length 36–41 cm, weight 230–545 g); the broader bill helps distinguish it from the latter.[1][12][13][11]
The Cinnamon teal is classified in the family Anatidae, order Anseriformes, as a member of the dabbling duck subfamily Anatinae. Its scientific name is Spatula cyanoptera (Linnaeus, 1758), placing it in the genus Spatula, which includes other small ducks like the shovelers and several teals.[4][14] This genus was established to reflect the non-monophyletic nature of the traditional broad Anas genus, based on molecular phylogenetic analyses.[15] A 2024 whole-genome study proposed restoring the broader Anas genus to include Spatula species, but this revision has not been adopted by authorities like the American Ornithological Society (AOS) as of 2025.[16]Taxonomically, the species was originally described as Anas cyanoptera by Linnaeus in 1758, with historical synonyms including Querquedula cyanoptera. It was reclassified into Spatula following genetic studies in 2009 that demonstrated polyphyly in Anas, prompting revisions by authorities like the American Ornithological Society (AOS, formerly AOU) and South American Classification Committee (SACC).[14][17] Within Spatula, the Cinnamon teal is closely related to the Blue-winged teal (Spatula discors), sharing a sister-group relationship supported by mitochondrial DNA and nuclear intron sequences; this proximity facilitates hybridization in zones of range overlap, yielding fertile offspring.[18]No fossils are known specifically for S. cyanoptera, but related dabbling ducks in the subfamily Anatinae have records from the Miocene epoch, with early representatives of related Anatinae taxa appearing in lacustrine deposits across Eurasia and the Americas.[19] The species is universally recognized as a full, distinct entity by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and AOS, without proposed splits despite its subspecies variation.[6][20]
Subspecies
The Cinnamon teal (Spatula cyanoptera) is recognized as comprising five subspecies, with one restricted to North America and the remaining four occurring in Central and South America.[1][9] These subspecies exhibit variations in body size, plumage intensity, and habitat adaptations, reflecting regional ecological differences.[1][21]The northern cinnamon teal (S. c. septentrionalium) is the sole subspecies in North America, breeding from British Columbia southward to northwestern Mexico and migrating to wintering grounds in the southwestern United States and Mexico.[1][9] It is distinguished by its larger body size compared to southern forms and brighter cinnamonplumage in breeding males, with more extensive spotting.[1][9]In South America, the nominate subspecies (S. c. cyanoptera) inhabits low-elevation wetlands (typically below 1,000 m) from Colombia southward to southern Argentina and Chile.[21][9] It is smaller in size and features duller plumage tones relative to northern populations, with reduced sexual size dimorphism.[1][9]The Andean cinnamon teal (S. c. orinomus) occupies high-altitude alpine wetlands in the Andes, ranging from 2,500–5,000 m in Peru, Bolivia, and northern Chile.[21][22] As the largest subspecies, it shows adaptations to hypoxic conditions, including phenotypic divergence in body size and hemoglobin variants from lowland forms.[21] Its plumage tends toward darker tones with less spotting in males.[1]Two subspecies are endemic to Colombia: the tropical cinnamon teal (S. c. tropica), found in lowland tropical wetlands and noted as the smallest form, and Borrero's cinnamon teal (S. c. borreroi), which inhabits isolated highland populations similar to tropica but has not been recorded since the 1950s and is considered possibly extinct.[9][6]Genetic studies indicate that divergence among subspecies, particularly between lowland (S. c. cyanoptera) and highland (S. c. orinomus) forms, arose during the Pleistocene approximately 170,000 years ago, driven by habitat isolation despite some historical gene flow.[21] This isolation contributed to distinct evolutionary trajectories in physiology and morphology across elevations.[21]
Distribution and habitat
Geographic range
The Cinnamon teal (Spatula cyanoptera) exhibits a pan-American distribution spanning from approximately 60°N in Alaska to 50°S in southern South America.[2] This species maintains distinct populations across the Americas, with the North American subspecies primarily utilizing western regions while South American subspecies occupy more southerly latitudes.[10]The breeding range in North America centers on western interiors, extending from Alaska and southwestern Canada, including British Columbia, southward through the Pacific Northwest, Rocky Mountains, Great Basin, and California to western Mexico, with isolated populations in arid intermountain areas like the Great Basin.[10][23] In South America, separate breeding occurs in Colombia, coastal Peru, Bolivia, Argentina, and Chile, often in highland wetlands.[3] The North American subspeciesS. c. septentrionalium is fully migratory, while the four South American subspecies (S. c. tropica, S. c. borreroi, S. c. cyanoptera, and S. c. orinomus) are largely sedentary or undertake short altitudinal migrations within their ranges.[1][24]Wintering distributions for North American birds concentrate in Mexico, with smaller numbers in mild coastal and interior sites in California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas; some reach Central America and the Caribbean.[3][10] South American populations remain largely resident year-round in northern regions from Colombia to southern Argentina.[25] Post-breeding migration follows the Pacific Flyway southward, with fall movements peaking from August to October and spring return from March to May; vagrants occasionally appear in eastern North America, including a notable 2024 sighting in Grimsby, Ontario.[3][26][27]Historically, the North American range expanded in the 20th century, facilitated by artificial wetland creation through irrigation and reservoir development in the arid west.[4] However, recent contractions have occurred in arid western regions, potentially driven by increasing drought and habitat loss, leading to population declines in areas like Washington state. As of 2025, the North American breeding population is estimated at 260,000–300,000 individuals, but surveys indicate ongoing declines in some regions.[28][29][6][30]
Habitat preferences
The Cinnamon teal primarily inhabits shallow freshwater marshes, ponds, and lakes featuring emergent vegetation such as cattails (Typha spp.), bulrushes (Scirpus spp.), rushes (Juncus spp.), sedges (Carex spp.), and reeds. These birds favor the fringes and edges of such wetlands, avoiding deep open water bodies that limit their dabbling foraging style. While they predominantly select freshwater environments, they tolerate brackish and highly alkaline waters, particularly in regions like the Great Basin of North America.[2][31][3][4][9]During the breeding season, Cinnamon teals seek dense vegetative cover near water edges for nesting, often placing nests on the ground beneath matted dead grasses less than 2 feet (60 cm) tall, in rushes, sedges, or grasses, and occasionally over water in dense bulrushes or cattails. In North America, breeding habitats include open country prairies and alkali flats, where females select sites with a high proportion of grasses and low forb cover to enhance concealment and survival. These preferences extend to a broad altitudinal range from sea level to elevations exceeding 4,600 m, with the subspeciesSpatula cyanoptera orinomus occupying Andean highlands up to 5,000 m. Microhabitat requirements emphasize areas with abundant aquatic plants and invertebrates, supporting food availability, alongside water of relatively low turbidity to maintain vegetation health.[31][4][32][22]For foraging, Cinnamon teals target muddy shallows in wetlands, where they dabble in water typically less than 30 cm deep to access invertebrates and seeds; they tolerate saline or alkaline conditions but exhibit a strong preference for freshwater. During migration and non-breeding periods, they shift to seasonal habitats such as flooded agricultural fields, managed wetlands, and even wastewater sites or urbanponds, demonstrating adaptability to human-modified landscapes like rice paddies for opportunistic use.[31][3][33][34]
Behavior and ecology
Diet and foraging
The Cinnamon teal (Spatula cyanoptera) maintains an omnivorous diet, with plant matter comprising the majority, typically 55–91% by dry mass depending on season and location, primarily consisting of seeds from grasses, sedges, pondweeds, and smartweeds, as well as other aquatic vegetation. Animal matter makes up the remaining 9–45%, including aquatic insect larvae (such as chironomids and midges), mollusks like snails and small clams, crustaceans, and zooplankton.[35][10][31]Foraging occurs mainly in shallow wetlands, where the species employs dabbling techniques, such as tipping up the tail to submerge the head and reach submerged plants or invertebrates, or feeding with the head underwater in shallows to strain food items. They filter particles using the lamellae on their bill, a structure adapted for sieving small items from water or mud, and occasionally graze on emergent vegetation or shoreline plants near water. Social foraging is common, with individuals or groups moving in unison across areas, one bird often following another to exploit food disturbed by the leader's movements.[5][31][36][10]Seasonal variations in diet reflect nutritional needs, with higher proportions of protein-rich invertebrates (up to 45% animal matter) consumed during springmigration and breeding to support egg production and molt, while winter and fall diets shift toward energy-dense seeds (up to 91% plant matter).[35][5][10][37]Cinnamon teals compete for resources with other dabbling ducks in shared shallow-water habitats but opportunistically exploit agricultural areas, such as flooded rice fields and grain stubble, where they consume waste seeds and grains.[31][38][39]
Cinnamon teal form seasonally monogamous pairs, typically on wintering grounds or during northward migration, with pair bonds renewing annually. Males perform courtship displays to attract females, including head-pumping where the head is raised and lowered rhythmically, wing preening behind the back, short jump flights, and vocalizations such as short high-pitched nasal whistles or "raeb-raeb" calls. Females may respond by swimming ahead to incite pursuit or reject advances with their own head-pumping displays. Once paired, males guard the female and defend a territory around foraging and nesting areas.[31][40][9]Nesting occurs in a ground depression scraped by the female, typically in dense emergent vegetation such as grasses, sedges, or rushes, 10-50 m from shallow freshwater edges. The bowl-shaped nest measures about 18-20 cm across and 5-6 cm deep, lined with plant material and down feathers from the female's breast for insulation. Cinnamon teal are generally single-brooded but may produce a second clutch if the first fails, with renesting documented in response to early predation or disturbance.[31][36][29]The female lays 8-14 creamy white eggs (average 10-12), at a rate of one every 1-2 days, with full clutch completion taking 10-14 days. Incubation begins after the penultimate or final egg and lasts 21-25 days, performed solely by the female, who maintains high attendance (around 89%) with 2-3 daily recesses for foraging. The male remains nearby to guard the territory but does not participate in incubation. Hatching is synchronous, with precocial ducklings emerging covered in yellow down and an eye stripe, leaving the nest within 24 hours to reach water.[31][36][29]The female alone rears the brood, brooding ducklings under her wings for protection during the first 4-5 weeks while leading them to foraging areas; ducklings are independent feeders from hatching but stay with the hen until fledging at about 49 days (6–7 weeks). Predation poses a major threat, with approximately 50% duckling mortality from hatch to fledging due to predators like skunks and raccoons. Overall breeding success varies, with nest survival (to hatching) at 20-30% and combined hatching-to-fledging rates yielding 20-40% successful fledglings per attempt.[31][36][29][10]Occasional hybridization with blue-winged teal occurs due to similar ecology and genetics, potentially reducing purebred reproductive output through sterile or less viable offspring.[9]
Migration
The northern subspecies of the Cinnamon teal, Spatula cyanoptera septentrionalium, is fully migratory, breeding in wetlands across the western United States and southern Canada before wintering primarily in coastal and interior marshes of Mexico.[4] In contrast, southern subspecies, such as S. c. tropica and S. c. borreroi in Colombia and Ecuador, exhibit partial migration or are largely sedentary, remaining in year-round wetland habitats in northern South America.[41]Cinnamon teal primarily follow the Pacific Flyway during migration, traveling from breeding grounds in the intermountain west and Great Basin southward through California, Arizona, and New Mexico to wintering areas in Mexico, with some individuals using portions of the Central Flyway.[3][42] Migration distances for S. c. septentrionalium typically range from 2,000 to 3,000 km to wintering areas in Mexico and Central America.[28][43]Breeding activities conclude by late July, after which southward migration commences in August for males and unsuccessful females, with successful females and young following through October; northbound migration occurs from March to May, often earlier than other North American dabbling ducks.[44][3] During peak fall movements, flocks typically number fewer than 30 individuals but can reach 100–1,000 birds in key areas, mixing with other teal species.[4][45]Migrating Cinnamon teal rely on wetland complexes for stopovers, including the Salton Sea and Klamath Basin in California and Oregon, where they select managed wetlands, flooded agricultural fields, and riparian areas to rest and refuel.[46][47] At these sites, birds consume high-energy seeds and invertebrates to replenish fat stores, with median fall stopover durations varying by ecoregion, such as 2–5 days in cold deserts.[27] Analysis of 61 tracked individuals identified 261 stopover sites across western North America, emphasizing the importance of private lands (72.5% of sites) in supporting migration.[48]Navigation during migration involves a combination of visual landmarks, celestial cues like stars, and weather patterns, with birds avoiding major barriers such as the Rocky Mountains by following river valleys and lowland corridors.[31] Movements are highly weather-dependent, with favorable winds accelerating progress along the Pacific Flyway.[27]Vagrants are rare east of the Mississippi River, with occasional records highlighting navigational errors; for example, a Cinnamon teal was documented in Grimsby, Ontario, in September 2024, attracting over 200 observers.[26] Climate change may increase such vagrancy by altering wind patterns and storm frequencies, potentially shifting migration routes eastward.[49]Prior to departure, Cinnamon teal undergo pre-migratory fattening, accumulating lipid reserves equivalent to 20–30% of body weight to fuel long flights and withstand stopover stressors, similar to patterns observed in related dabbling ducks.[50] This energetic preparation is critical, as tracked birds departed breeding areas with median fat scores supporting distances of over 1,000 km per leg.[27]
Conservation
Status
The Cinnamon teal (Spatula cyanoptera) is classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List, with this assessment reflecting a stable overall conservation status as of 2025, despite some regional declines.[6] The global population is estimated at approximately 380,000 mature individuals, based on Partners in Flight assessments.[6] In North America, the breeding population for the subspecies S. c. septentrionalium is estimated at 260,000–300,000 birds.[3]Population trends for the Cinnamon teal are generally stable at the global scale, though data indicate a suspected overall decrease driven by regional variations.[6] In North America, Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) data show a decline of approximately 2–3% annually in the western United States since 1968, while populations in Canada have remained relatively stable from 1970 to 2022.[31] Recent 2025 surveys indicate increases in breeding populations in parts of the western US, such as a 38% rise in one state, suggesting potential stabilization or recovery in monitored areas.[51] In South America, trends are less well-monitored, but some areas report local population increases, potentially linked to habitat modifications.[4]Regionally, the Cinnamon teal holds a secure breeding rank of S5B (demonstrably secure) in many western U.S. states, such as Montana and others within its core range.[52] It is protected under the U.S. Migratory Bird Treaty Act, which safeguards it from take without permit.[53]Population monitoring relies on programs like the North American Breeding Bird Survey, which tracks breeding abundance and trends with high reliability, and the ChristmasBird Count, though the latter has lower reliability for this species due to its migratory patterns.[6] eBird data indicate increasing sightings in modified habitats, such as managed wetlands, flooded agriculture, and wastewater sites, suggesting adaptability to human-altered environments.[33]Hunting regulations in the U.S. and Canada include bag limits, typically allowing up to six teal per day in aggregate during appropriate seasons.[54] Combined Blue-winged and Cinnamon teal harvest estimates total around 800,000–1,400,000 annually in the US (2022–2024), with specific Cinnamon teal figures unavailable due to combined reporting; North American totals are similar as most harvest occurs in the US.[55][31]
Threats
The primary threats to Cinnamon teal populations stem from extensive habitat loss and degradation across their range in western North America and parts of South America. Since the early 1900s, over 50% of wetlands in key areas such as California, Nevada, Arizona, and Mexico have been drained or converted for agriculture, urbanization, and livestock grazing, severely reducing available breeding and foraging sites for this wetland-dependent species.[56][57] In California alone, up to 91% of original wetlands have been lost primarily to agricultural expansion (1780s–1980s), while Mexico has experienced approximately 62% wetland reduction due to similar pressures.[56][57] These conversions fragment remaining habitats, limiting the teal's access to shallow, vegetated marshes essential for nesting and feeding.Habitat degradation further exacerbates risks through pollution and altered hydrology. Pesticides and heavy metals from agricultural runoff accumulate in wetlands, contaminating food sources like aquatic plants and invertebrates that form the bulk of the Cinnamon teal's diet.[58] For instance, in areas like the Salton Sea, legacy pollutants including DDT and heavy metals persist in sediments, posing bioaccumulation threats to foraging ducks.[58]Dams, irrigation diversions, and ongoing drainage projects disrupt natural water flows, leading to drier conditions and reduced wetland productivity in arid regions.[42]Climate change intensifies these pressures by decreasing wetland availability through prolonged droughts and altered precipitation patterns. In the western U.S., landscape drying has shortened inundation periods for semi-permanent wetlands by up to 24%, directly impacting breeding and migration stopover sites for Cinnamon teal.[59] Warmer temperatures may also shift breedingphenology earlier, potentially desynchronizing teal reproduction with peak wetland flooding and invertebrate availability.[60]Hunting represents a significant direct mortality factor, with legal harvests in the Americas totaling around 800,000–1,400,000 combined Cinnamon and Blue-winged teal annually (2022–2024), as monitored by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.[55] Illegal poaching in South American wintering grounds adds unregulated pressure, particularly in regions with limited enforcement, though specific estimates for Cinnamon teal are scarce.[61]Predation rates on nests and broods have increased due to habitat fragmentation, which facilitates access by generalist predators. In Great Salt Lake wetlands, raccoons (Procyon lotor) and striped skunks (Mephitis mephitis) depredate a substantial portion of ground nests, with overall duck nest success varying widely based on site isolation.[62][63] The expansion of red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) into former prairie habitats has correlated with local Cinnamon teal declines, as fragmented wetlands allow these mesopredators easier proximity to nesting areas.[62]Additional threats include hybridization with Blue-winged teal (Spatula discors), which can dilute genetic distinctiveness, particularly in overlapping North American ranges where shared haplotypes indicate occasional gene flow.[64]Invasive species, such as non-native plants and fish, compete for food resources and alter wetland vegetation structure, indirectly reducing foraging efficiency for seeds and insects.[29]Certain subspecies face heightened vulnerability due to their endemism. S. c. borreroi from eastern Colombia has not been recorded since the 1950s and is possibly extinct, though recent sightings of undetermined subspecies suggest potential persistence, while S. c. tropica, also endemic to Colombian paramos, remains at risk from similar narrow-range constraints.[6][23]