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Decoy

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See Decoy (TV series) for the 1957 television series of this name.

A decoy is usually a person, device or event meant as a distraction to conceal what an individual or a group might be looking for. Decoys have been used for centuries most notably in game hunting, but also in wartime and in the committing or resolving of crimes.

The decoy in war may e.g. be a wooden fake tank, designed to be mistaken by bomber plane crews to be real, or a device that fools an automatic system such as a guided missile, by simulating some physical properties of a real target.

For a defence system, decoys and chaff for ICBMs would mainly work in midcourse: during the boost phase they would be inside the rocket, because separate rockets for each of many decoys would not be practical, while at reentry light decoys and chaff considerably slow down and/or are destroyed in the atmosphere.

A decoy was originally a small pond with a long cone-shaped wickerwork tunnel, used to catch wild ducks. After the ducks settled, a small trained dog would lead the ducks into the tunnel. The catch was formerly sent to market for food, but now these are only used to catch ducks to be ringed and released: see ornithology. The word came from Dutch eende kooi = "duck cage". As the above meaning of a person or device surplanted the original meaning as the most common, the latter aquired the retronym "decoy pool".

Duck decoy carving is considered a form of folk art. Collecting and selling decoys have become a lucrative industry. The world record was set in January of 2003 when a preening pintail drake (circa 1915) by A. Elmer Crowell of Harwell, MA sold for $801,500(US).

See also

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Duck Museum. Salisbury, MD.