Chinese
The Chinese goose is a domestic goose breed descended from the swan goose, Anser cygnoides, rather than from the greylag ancestry behind many European geese. It is recognized by a long neck, upright carriage, and a knob at the base of the bill, with white and brown varieties common in many countries. Compared with heavier meat geese, Chinese geese are usually lighter, active, vocal, and capable layers.
Farms and smallholders keep Chinese geese for eggs, weed control, alarm behavior, exhibition, and moderate table use. Their voices make them useful sentries but poor fits for noise-sensitive neighborhoods. They need secure night housing, clean water deep enough to wash the head, pasture or greens, and protection from extreme heat and predators. Breeders should watch knob size, body balance, fertility, and leg soundness without selecting birds so extreme that the head or posture affects comfort. Buyers should ask whether a line is bred for utility, show, or backyard management.
Colors: Blue, Brown, Brown and White, Buff, Gray, Gray and White, Lavender, Pied, Saddleback, Tufted, White