Goose
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Goose is the general English name for a considerable number of
birds, belonging to the family
Anatidae. This family also includes the
swans, which are mostly larger than geese, and the
ducks, which are smaller.
Introduction
This article deals with the true geese in the subfamily Anserinae. A number of other waterbirds, mainly related to the shelducks, have "goose" as part of their name.
True geese are medium to large birds, always (with the exception of the Néné) associated to a greater or lesser extent with water. Most species in Europe, Asia and North America are strongly migratory as wild birds, breeding in the far north and wintering much further south. However, escapes and introductions have led to resident feral populations of several species.
Geese have been domesticated for centuries. In the West, farmyard geese are descended from the Greylag, but in Asia the Swan Goose has been farmed for at least as long.
All geese eat an exclusively vegetarian diet, and some can become pests when flocks feed on arable crops.
Geese tend to lay a smaller number of eggs than ducks. However, both parents protect the nest and young, which usually results in a higher survival rate for the young geese, known as goslings.
Goose species
True geese
The following are the true goose species.
Genus Anser, Grey Geese\n* Greylag Goose Anser anser\n* White-fronted Goose A. albifrons\n* Lesser White-fronted Goose A. erythropus\n* Bean Goose A. fabalis\n* Pink-footed Goose A. brachyrhynchus\n* Bar-headed Goose A. indicus \n* Swan Goose, A. cygnoides
Genus Anser or Chen (depending on authority cited)\n* Snow Goose Anser caerulescens or Chen caerulescens\n* Ross's Goose, A. rossii or C. rossii\n* Emperor Goose, A. canagicus or C. canagica
Genus Branta, Black Geese\n* Brent Goose Branta bernicla\n* Barnacle Goose B. leucopsis\n* Canada Goose B. canadensis\n* Red-breasted Goose B. ruficollis\n* Néné or Hawaiian Goose, B. sandvicensis
Genus Cereopsis\n* Cape Barren Goose, Cereopsis novaehollandiae
Other species called "geese"
There are a number of mainly southern hemisphere birds named as geese which are more correctly placed with the shelducks in the Tadorninae. These are:
The three perching ducks in the genus
Nettapus are named as Pygmy Geese, eg
Cotton Pygmy Goose,
Nettapus javanica, but are true
ducks.
The odd
Magpie Goose is in a family of its own, the Anseranatidae.
Etymology
Goose in its origins is one of the oldest words of the Indo-European languages, the modern names deriving from the proto-Indo-European root,
ghans, hence Sanskrit
hamsa (feminine
hamsii), Latin
anser, Greek
khén etc.
In the
Germanic languages, the root word led to Old English
gos with the plural
gés, German
Gans and Old Norse
gas. Other modern derivatives are Russian
gus and Old Irish
géiss.
In non-technical use, the male goose is called a "gander" (Anglo-Saxon
gandra) and the female is the "goose".\n(Source:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Geese in fiction and myth
There is the goose that laid the golden eggs, warning about the perils of being too greedy. And there is also the poem Goosy Goosy Gander.
Temple geese were said by Livy to have saved
Rome from the
Gauls around
390 BC when disturbed in a night attack.
Other meanings
Goose can have some other meanings in slang.
- A fool (common in the works of Wodehouse) or someone who is shy (also goosy/goosey).\n* A (usually sexual) attack on the posterior of the body.
See also:
\n*wildfowl\n*
waterfowl
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