When it comes to finding a meal, some birds have learned to be opportunistic, such as that squawking gull that grabs your dropped French fry. Clumsy humans are an obvious food source for intrepid gulls. But Hakai researchers were scratching their heads a few winters ago when they saw sea ducks eating alongside an unexpected companion.
“Sea otters are carnivores with big teeth and they can be aggressive towards birds,” says Hakai researcher Erin Rechsteiner. “So we were surprised when we saw harlequin ducks following them.”
Harlequins spend British Columbia winters close to the coast, where they fatten up before flying inland in the spring to nest alongside freshwater streams. In the ocean, these ducks feed by dipping their heads into shallow water to pluck crabs and snails from the rocks.
The male ducks have a loud outer appearance—metallic blue and copper plumage with white and black stripes—but, along with the drabber brown females, are usually shy and easily spooked.
“It was such a cold winter in 2014. The beaches were coated in ice and the tide pools had frozen over. This might’ve meant that the ducks had a hard time finding food without resorting to thievery,” says Rechsteiner.
Conveniently for the ducks, their neighbors are notoriously messy eaters. Sea otters are golden-retriever-sized marine weasels with an insatiable appetite. Unlike the shallow-diving harlequin ducks, sea otters regularly dive down more than twenty meters and pluck sea urchins and other creatures off the seafloor. The sea urchins are far too large and far too deep for the harlequin ducks to access themselves, but are full of nutritious fats that the ducks can use to help them get through the winter.
At the surface, sea otters crack open the urchin by ripping it apart with their paws or banging it with a rock that they use like an anvil. Once the urchin is pried open, the otters slurp up the nutritious, mustard-colored gonads as best they can before diving back for more. A mess of uneaten urchin bits floats in their wake. The scavenging ducks are like dumpster divers living next to a wasteful five-star restaurant.
A hungry harlequin will do anything for a meal, even if it means trailing around after a weasel. During the Central Coast winter, harlequin ducks took to snatching urchin scraps like—well, like ducks to water.