Navigate Namibia-03
Navigate Namibia-03
  • Namibia
    • Overview
    • Language
    • History
    • People
  • Travel
    • Travel Advice
    • Tours
    • Accommodations
    • Activities
    • Car Rental
  • Nature
  • Parks
    • All
    • Northern Namibia
    • Southern Namibia
    • Western Namibia
    • Central Namibia
    • Eastern Namibia
    • Communal Conservancies
  • News

Hottentot teal

Anas hottentota
Hottentot teals are found in a permanent and semi-permanent shallow and freshwater wetlands.

Hottentot teal

Introduction: Hottentot teals (Anas hottentota) are found in a permanent and semi-permanent shallow, freshwater wetlands, fringed with bulrushes, reeds, sedges and other tall vegetation and floating plants. Another habitat is sewage ponds.

Distribution: Linyati Swamps/Chobe River region. Lake Liambeze in the Caprivi, Kwando River, Tsumkwe, Etosha National Park and northern Namib Desert coastal areas. They are a wet season visitor to the Okavango Delta.

Diet: Pondweed, aquatic insects and small frogs.

Description: The smallest duck in Namibia! Different plumages for male and female. A blue-grey bill and feet.

Breeding: Females build a nest of a deep bowl lined with leaves and other plant material from the surrounding vegetation. Between 5 and 12 eggs are laid in winter and spring on the Skeleton Coast. Pairs do not stay together after the incubation period of 25 to 27 days.

Size: 33 to 36cm.

Weight: 250g.

Navigate Namibia

Privacy Policy & GDPR Compliance
Disclaimer
 

 

Follow Gondwana Collection Namibia

Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by namibian.org
EXPLORE NAMIBIA
  • Discover
  • Travel
  • Nature & Parks
  • News & Updates
  • About Us
  • Useful Resources
OUR SISTER BRANDS
  • Gondwana Collection Namibia
  • Namibia2Go
  • Go2 Tourism Shuttle
  • Gondwana Travel Centre
  • The Narrative Online Curio Shop
  • Padlangs Namibia
  • Namibia Weather
PARKS
  • Northern Namibia
  • Southern Namibia
  • Western Namibia
  • Central Namibia
  • Eastern Namibia
  • Communal Conservancies