Harris—Birds of the Kansas City Region. 231 
It remains during open winters in favorable localities and 
has been known to breed in the county. The dates of its oceur- 
rence here cover the entire year, though lately it is seen only 
during migration. 
A flock of six nearly full-grown young were seen on Mill 
Creek, between Independence and Courtney, on June 17, 1892. 
Subfamily Anatinae. River Ducks. 
ANAS PLATYRHYNCHOS Linn. Mallard. 
Abundant migrant, fairly common winter resident and occasional 
summer resident 
The Mallard is present in some numbers during every winter 
that the Missouri River remains open. The first birds from the 
north begin to arrive early in September, though the great 
flocks do not come through until the middle of October, when 
they are here in varying numbers until the last days of Novem- 
ber and the first half of December. Unless the winter be ex- 
ceptionally severe, the northward movement begins late in Janu- 
ary and early February. By the last week in March the crest 
of the migratory wave has passed, though stragglers may be 
seen as late as the middle of May. 
In former times the Mallard nested commonly along the 
Missouri River bottoms from its mouth, and Widmann states 
that a few still find safe breeding grounds in the large tracts 
of spartina grass in the marshes of north Missouri. Smithson 
found Mallards breeding near Warrensburg in 1903 and 1904. 
They have been known to breed also during recent years near 
Bigelow. 
During the past two or three years there has been a very 
noticeable increase in the numbers of these and other ducks. 
The autumn flight of 1916 was decidedly larger than any seen 
for many years. 
On January 29, 1917, there was a 8’ éprising southward 
flight of thousands of Mallards and Pintaiis. A severe blizzard 
followed the ducks, accompanied by a temperature of twelve 
degrees below zero. These birds had spent the winter up to 
this date in northern Missouri, although there had been periods 
during which all lakes and streams, except the Missouri River, 
had been frozen solid. The closing of the river during this bliz- 
zard probably accounts for this movement. 
