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New York has a quacking celeb

NOBODY KNOWS WHERE IT CAME FROM BUT MANDARIN DUCK HAS GOT OFF TO A FLYING START IN CENTRAL PARK

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Within the past month, the Mandarin duck — sometimes called the “hot duck” — has become an internatio­nal celebrity. A living, breathing, quacking meme. It has been difficult to scroll through Twitter without seeing a photo of his magnificen­t multicolou­red plumage.

He has been featured on prime time news and discussed on latenight talk shows. His likeness has been stamped on T-shirts. Even the official mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party saw him fit for a tweet.

With each new burst of media attention, crowds jostled each other around the edge of the Central Park Pond just to catch a glimpse. The duck has been captured at nearly every angle and endowed with a multitude of internet voices.

When he can’t immediatel­y be found, his fans worry. When he takes a side trip to New Jersey, they fear he’s turning into a suburbanit­e. There is one cohort of New Yorkers though who are slightly less amused: serious birders. The ones who ogled ducks in Central Park before it was cool.

Thrilled to the core

On the whole, they are thrilled that this duck could draw outsiders into the broader world of birdwatchi­ng. Sean Sime, who has been birding in the city for more than 20 years, called him a “spark bird,” a fantastic creature that brings newcomers into the fold.

At the same time, the Mandarin fixation has left a bit of a sour taste, Sime said. Birding is about taking in the natural world, and the internet-fuelled popularity of the duck is anything but natural.

How did the duck reach Central Park? Nobody knows. Mandarin ducks are native to East Asia, not North America, so experts concluded that the duck was likely an abandoned or escaped pet.

Because the duck is not believed to have reached the city naturally, birders can’t add him on their “life list,” a record of wild birds that an individual has seen, said Matthew Rymkiewicz, another local enthusiast. He worries about the behaviour of the duck’s fans. “It’s a wild animal,” he said. “So respect it and have boundaries.”

Many birders online took issue a fellow birder, David Barrett, who used a soft pretzel to try to coax the Mandarin to the shore and then, when that failed, chased him from one end of the pond with some convincing quacks.

Sime said that behaviour made birders cringe because it went against a widely accepted birder ethical code.

Barrett, the creator and manager of the Twitter account Manhattan Bird Alert, can be fairly described as the duck’s kingmaker. He said his strategies for bringing the duck closer to shore were exceptions, and he has subsequent­ly promoted healthy duck-watching behaviour. (But, he added, it’s not as if he pioneered the idea of feeding bread to ducks.)

As for the duck’s internet stardom, Barrett doesn’t see a problem. “What’s unhealthy about people liking a beautiful, natural thing?”

But as the duck turned into a bona fide star, some of us worried that the obsession would take a sinister turn. That someone who loved him a bit too much would steal him away. That a hawk would swoop down and pick him up by the scruff of his neck. (The Urban Park Rangers say they check on the bird’s safety regularly.)

For now, the duck seems content to winter in New York City and could, like so many other transplant­s, make the city his permanent home. Theoretica­lly, the Mandarin could mate with a native duck, an ornitholog­ist with the Cornell Lab of Ornitholog­y said, although it’s unclear if they could produce offspring.

Perhaps, with time, the novelty will wear off. On a recent afternoon, a light crowd of about a dozen people closely watched the Mandarin duck float serenely atop the water of the Pond, apparently napping as a sprinkling of rain made the water around him ripple. We watched him swim toward rocks near the shore, on top of which some mallards were dozing.

He climbed out of the water and indulged in some post-nap grooming on the rock’s edge. Apparently dissatisfi­ed with his spot, he snapped his bill at two mallards sleeping with their heads nestled in their feathers.

They flapped away, and the Mandarin took his place at the rock’s highest point, looking regal, and magnificen­tly out of place.

What’s unhealthy about people liking a beautiful, natural thing?” Barnett | Creator and manager of the Twitter account Manhattan Bird Alert

 ?? Rex Features ?? The Mandarin Duck in Central Park, New York, USA has been featured on prime time news and discussed on late-night talk shows. His likeness has been stamped on T-shirts. Even the official mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party saw him fit for a tweet.
Rex Features The Mandarin Duck in Central Park, New York, USA has been featured on prime time news and discussed on late-night talk shows. His likeness has been stamped on T-shirts. Even the official mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party saw him fit for a tweet.

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