Puneet Varma (Editor)

Burmese chicken

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Country of origin
  
Egg color
  
Brown

Origin
  
Myanmar (Burma)

Use
  
Ornamental

Comb type
  
Single

Rank
  
Breed

Burmese chicken httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Weight
  
Male: 600 gFemale: 500 g

Similar
  
Thai Game, Ayam Kampong, Shamo chicken, Burmese cat, Birman

The Burmese chicken is a bantam chicken from Myanmar. The breed was never common, and was thought to have become extinct in the early 20th century. However, several surviving individuals were discovered in the 1970s and subsequently bred with the Bearded d'Uccle, Crevecoeur, Cochin and Japanese Bantam to recreate the breed. They are still scarce today.

The Burmese chicken was mentioned in Charles Darwin's book, The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication.

The Burmese chicken possesses the so-called "creeper gene", which results in exceptionally short legs. Named for the creeping or floating gait that it elicits in the chickens that carry the mutation, this gene causes high mortality, as all embryos carrying two copies of the allele die before hatching. Only embryos containing a single copy of the "creeper gene" develop short legs; embryos with no copies yield a chicken with legs of normal length.

The Burmese chicken has a single comb and a small crest. Their legs are generously feathered and they have vulture hocks like the Sultan chicken. Their carriage is low. The hens lay brown eggs. This breed requires considerable attention to maintain its appearance.

References

Burmese chicken Wikipedia


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