waterfowl,
common term for members of the order Anseriformes,
wild, aquatic, typically freshwater birds including
ducks, geese, and screamers. In Great Britain
the term is also used to designate species kept
for ornamental purposes on private lakes or ponds,
while in North America it is used for quarry species
and is sometimes extended to refer to wading birds
of the order Charadriiformes, such as plovers
and sandpipers, as well as to other edible water
birds.
The
hunting of any of these birds is known most generally
as duck hunting. In Britain quarry species are
referred to as wildfowl and their hunting as wildfowling.
British wildfowling, formerly done with nets,
is now done with shotguns, as is duck hunting
in North America, but the practices differ in
some respects. In North America the birds are
typically shot as they approach to investigate
rubber, wooden, plastic, or other decoys. The
British, however, manipulate the birds by deliberately
feeding them at certain places, a practice generally
outlawed in North America, where hunting tends
to be more strictly legislated. with a white fringe.(source
- 1uPiNFO.com)
Provinces or
Territories - Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba,
Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick.