The swan is a traditional symbol of beauty, grace, and dignity. It can also symbolize a farewell appearance or final act, as in “swan song.”
a bird of the family Anatidae of the order Anseriformes. It measures up to 180 cm long and weighs up to 13 kg. The length of the neck is equal to or exceeds the length of the body. There are six species, combined into two genera: black swans (Chenopsis) and true swans (Cygnus).
The genus Chenopsis comprises one species, the black swan (Ch. atrata), which is distributed in Australia and Tasmania and is acclimatized in New Zealand. The genus Cygnus comprises five species, one of which is distributed in the subarctic regions, two in Europe and Asia, one in North America, and one in South America.
In the USSR there are three species of true swans: the mute swan, the whooper swan, and Bewick’s swan. The mute swan (C. olor) is the largest of all the swans. The male has a black knob on its bill. The bird is distributed in some parts of the southeast European Plain and in Kazakhstan, Middle Asia, and Western Siberia. The whooper swan (C. cygnus), somewhat smaller than the mute swan, is widely distributed except in the tundra. However, it is becoming increasingly rare everywhere. Bewick’s swan (C. bewicki) measures about 120 cm long and weighs up to 7 kg. It inhabits the tundra. Swans that nest in the USSR winter on the seas, sometimes even in the north, and more rarely on freshwater lakes in the south.
Swans settle on large lakes in reed thickets. The nests are bulky, and they are built by both the male and female on the shore, next to the water. Five to seven eggs, although sometimes as many as 12, are laid per clutch, and they are incubated by the female for 35 to 40 days. The male guards the female and the cygnets. Swans generally mate for many years. They swim well but cannot dive and therefore feed only in shallow waters. They eat aquatic and littoral plants and sometimes aquatic invertebrates.
Swans are often kept on ponds in parks. They have some commercial significance in the northern USSR; elsewhere, hunting them is prohibited.
A. I. IVANOV