They call it Mandarin mania.
Swarms of New York City locals, tourists and bird watchers have gathered at the shores of a Central Park pond since a mandarin duck was spotted there on 10 October.
Observers have crowded the shores of Central Park’s pond, hoping to get a glimpse of the colorful plumage and striking beak that sets the mandarin duck apart from your average mallard, and inspired its nickname, “hot duck”.
Mandarin mania has become so intense that panic struck on Wednesday when the Manhattan Bird Alert Twitter account declared: “The MANDARIN DUCK has gone missing.”
Manhattan Bird Alert@BirdCentralPark Where is our MANDARIN DUCK? He was not reported yesterday, and we checked the likely spots late day. If you see him, let us know! He likely still is in Central Park, but he has been known to fly to the Hudson River 79th-Street Boat Basin @WinoBradNY 1:55 PM – Nov 7, 2018 2,240 890 people are talking about this
Where is our MANDARIN DUCK? He was not reported yesterday, and we checked the likely spots late day. If you see him, let us know! He likely still is in Central Park, but he has been known to fly to the Hudson River 79th-Street Boat Basin @WinoBradNY
2,240
890 people are talking about this
“This makes me nervous,” wrote one worried duck fan. “Thoughts and prayers,” said another.
The duck was eventually spotted. Though given his wings, fame and interest in the Hudson river, there is concern he could disappear again. Maybe even for good.
The duck has enraptured New York City in a way no small creature has since a rat was seen carrying a pizza slice down subway stairs in 2015. Where pizza rat was a symbol for the city’s grime, the mandarin duck is a symbol of majesty and grace in Manhattan’s largest park.
No one has identified how the bird arrived in New York – mandarin ducks originate from eastern Siberia, China and Japan, though large mandarin duck populations also exist in Britain.
David Barrett, who runs the Manhattan Bird Alert Twitter, has said the Central Park mandarin duck was probably released or escaped from a zoo or private owner.
For more read the full of article at The Guardian