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Seasonal variation in size of duck populations was examined using weekly surveys along a 1.5 km section of the Waihopai River, Invercargill, New Zealand, between Jul 1995 and Jul 1996. Six species were recorded: mallard (
Anas platyrhynchos) (n = 8307), New Zealand shoveler (
A. variegata) (n = 285), grey duck (
A. superciliosa) (n = 36), paradise shelduck (
Tadorna variegata) (n = 4), grey teal (A. gracilis) (n = 1), and New Zealand scaup (
Aythya novaeseelandiae) (n = 1). Asynchronous seasonal trends were observed for mallard/grey duck and shoveler populations: mallard/grey duck numbers peaked during duck hunting season, whereas New Zealand shoveler peaked just prior, and declined during hunting season. A relatively constant rise in mallard/grey duck from Jan to late Jun highlights the difficulties in distinguishing the relative effects of post-breeding moult congregations vs. dispersal to refugia from hunting–related disturbance.