Greylag Goose
From Freepedia
| Greylag Goose Conservation status: Lower risk (lc) | ||||||||||||||
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| Image:Greylag Goose 800.jpg | ||||||||||||||
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| Anser anser (Linnaeus, 1758) | ||||||||||||||
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The Greylag Goose, Anser anser, is a bird with a wide range in the Old World, apparently breeding where suitable localities are to be found in many European countries, although it no longer breeds in southwestern Europe. Eastwards it extends across Asia to China. It is the type species of the genus Anser. It was in pre-Linnean times known as the Wild Goose (anser ferus).
The breeding habitat is a variety of wetlands includin marshes, lakes, and damp heather moors.
The Greylag is a large goose, 74-84 cm long with a 149-168 cm wingspan. It has a large head and almost triangular bill. The legs are pink, and the bird is easily identified in flight by the pale leading edge to the wing.
The western European nominate subspecies, A. a. anser, has a orange-pink bill and is slightly smaller and darker than the pink-billed Asian race, A. a. rubrirostris. Eastern European birds are often intermediate in appearance. It has a loud cackle kiYAAA-ga-ga, like the domestic goose.
This species is the ancestor of domesticated geese in Europe and North America. Flocks of feral birds derived from domestciated birds are widespread.
This species is migratory, moving south or west in winter, but Scottish breeders, some other populations in northwestern Europe, and feral flocks are largely resident. This species is one of the last to migrate, and it is thought that the English name signifies late, last, or slow, as in laggard, a loiterer, or old terms such as lagman, the last man, lagteeth, the posterior molar or "wisdom" teeth (as the last to appear), and lagclock, a clock that is behind time.
Thus the Greylag Goose is the grey goose, which in England when the name was given, was not strongly migratory but lagged behind the other wild goose species when they left for their northern breeding quarters.
Within science, the greylag goose is most notable as being the bird with which the ethologist Konrad Lorenz first did his major studying into the behavioural phenomenon of imprinting.



