Mergus

Typical mergansers
Red-breasted merganser (Mergus serrator)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Anseriformes
Family: Anatidae
Subfamily: Anatinae
Genus: Mergus
Linnaeus, 1758
Type species
Mergus serrator
Linnaeus, 1758
Species

Mergus australis Auckland Island merganser
Mergus merganser Common merganser
Mergus milleneri Chatham merganser
Mergus octosetaceus Brazilian merganser
Mergus serrator Red-breasted merganser
Mergus squamatus Scaly-sided merganser

Mergus is the genus containing the typical mergansers (/mɜːrˈɡænsərz/ mur-GAN-sərz), fish-eating ducks in the subfamily Anatinae.

The common merganser or goosander (Mergus merganser) and red-breasted merganser (M. serrator) have broad ranges in the northern hemisphere. The Brazilian merganser (M. octosetaceus) is a South American duck, and one of the six most threatened waterfowl in the world, with possibly fewer than 250 birds in the wild. The scaly-sided merganser or "Chinese merganser" (M. squamatus) is also an endangered species; it lives in temperate eastern Asia, breeding in the northeast and wintering further south.

The hooded merganser (Lophodytes cucullatus, formerly known as Mergus cucullatus) is not currently included in this genus but is closely related, and may be embedded within it. The other "aberrant" merganser, the smew (Mergellus albellus), previously thought to be closer to goldeneyes (Bucephala) due to the occurrence of natural hybrids, is now known to be basal to all the other mergansers from genetic analysis.

Although they are seaducks, most of the mergansers prefer riverine habitats, with only the red-breasted merganser being common at sea. These large fish-eating ducks typically have black-and-white or brown, and with bottle-green heads in the male plumage, while the females are largely grey or brownish and with brown heads; both sexes have somewhat shaggy crests. All have serrated edges to their long and thin bills that help them grip their prey. Along with the smew and hooded merganser, they are therefore often known as "sawbills". The goldeneyes, on the other hand, feed mainly on mollusks, and therefore have a more typical duck-bill.

Mergus ducks are also classified as "diving ducks" because they submerge completely in looking for food. In other traits, however, the genera Mergus, Lophodytes, Mergellus, and Bucephala are very similar; uniquely among all Anseriformes, they do not have notches at the hind margin of their sternum, but holes surrounded by bone.