Stuart46

By Stuart46

The coot

Coots have a black body overall, although it can appear dark grey in certain lights. The secondary flight feathers have white tips and the underwing is pale grey.
The head is black with a conspicuous white shield on the top of the face. The bill is pale pink, the eyes are deep red, and the legs are yellowy-green, and the lobed feet are grey. Males and females are similar, but in breeding plumage the male has a wider shield than the female.
Juvenile coots are duller and paler than the adults and have a dark brown body with a pale foreneck and upper breast.
Coots are monogamous and breed from March to July. They produce 2 broods a season. They build their nests in shallow water or occasionally on floating vegetation or tree stumps, resting on the base of trampled plants. The bulky nest is constructed from leaves, twigs, bark, roots, and reeds.
Coots lay 6-10 smooth, glossy, buff-coloured eggs with dark brown spots which are incubated by both parents for 21-26 days. Coot chicks are precocial and covered in black down with some yellow around the head and a bare, red crown. They are brooded at the nest for 3-4 days and are fed by both parents, sometimes helped by older chicks from a previous brood.
After about 4 weeks they are able to dive and can feed themselves although both parents will continue to feed them for up to 2 months after hatching. They fledge at about 2 months after hatching and can fly at about 8-11 weeks, but will remain near the nest for 14 weeks and will help defend the territory. They reach sexual maturity at 1 year.

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