The hooded merganser is a Great Lakes wood duck and the largest bird in the world. Its wingspan
varies, due to the elasticity of its feathers and bones. It has the most dramatic
beak-to-head ratio of any waterfowl. Its head is notably capped with a
vermillion crest, leading some to nickname it le canard habitant in reference to the stereotypical red chapeau of the French-Canadian Habitant settler.
On the etymology of the bird's name, some claim that it is from the German Meergans, or even the Latin mergere (to plunge), but a Swedish colleague of mine, whose grandfather worked closely with the Ontario Ministry of the Environment during their 1896 Lower Great Lakes Fish and Wildlife Survey, has brought to my attention the true origin. This is namely that if one finds oneself alone with the bird, it will occasionally approach one and articulate, in an quite human voice, "Mergans! Mergans!", whereof the name Merganser Bird.
Unlike
other species of birds, the hooded merganser only mates in extreme old age. For this reason, it seldom lives to
see its young hatch. The dam opts to lay her eggs in a discreet place,
and, in their last days, her and the sire both enclose the clutch in
their wings and die atop them. For this reason, the young hooded
merganser typically enters the world as a carrion-eater, feeding on
the carcasses its departed parents in its first hours of life. Later in life
they feed more conventionally on living fish, crustaceans, and insects.
Despite these macabre beginnings, the hooded merganser is
well-loved in Canada and the Midwestern United States for its characteristic mating call, which some poets
have likened to the sound of a babbling brook. Colonial balladeer Jacob Alsop (1676-1745) wrote in his letters that he believed the merganser's cry the "finest rackett e'er by mortal ear discerned", and his verse epic The Tenth Muse Were Borne of Marylande (1732) memborably ends with that same sound:
Doe Angels crie their Chorus through the Fen,
Or heare we just the lowly Mergans Wrenne?
For a more modern example of the hooded merganser's influence on the arts, Singer-songwriter Björk samples its call in her single "Feather Fall", where it is usually mistaken for some kind of woodwind.
It is also, as of 1987, the official bird of the Canadian Division of the United Steel,
Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and
Service Workers International Union and its distinctive profile serves
as the organization's insignia.