Branta ruficollis ( Red-breasted Goose - Κοκκινόχηνα )
Scientific name: Branta ruficollis
English name: Red-breasted Goose
Greek name: Κοκκινόχηνα
Size: 53 - 56 cm
Wing Span: 116-135 cm
Weight: M:
1200-1625 g – F: 1055-1130 g
Longevity : 15 Years
Diet : mainly feeds by grazing on the ground. It feeds on
grasses, seeds, tubers, cereal germs and sometimes even aquatic plants.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The red-breasted goose (Branta ruficollis) is a brightly marked species of goose in the genus Branta from Eurasia. It is currently classified as vulnerable by the IUCN.[1]
Taxonomy and etymology[edit]
The red-breasted goose is sometimes placed in its own genus Rufibrenta but appears close enough to the brant goose (Branta bernicla) to make this unnecessary, despite its distinct appearance. Today all major authorities include the red-breasted goose in Branta. Genetic studies indicate that the red-breasted goose may be one the few known examples of hybrid speciation in birds, being the result of ancient interbreeding between the ancestral brant goose and white-cheeked goose (the latter being the ancestral species that later split into all today's Branta species, except the brant and red-breasted geese). This interbreeding appears to have happened at least 3.5 million years ago, with the lineage of the red-breasted goose following its own evolutionary path since then.[3]
Branta is a Latinised form of Old Norse Brandgás, "burnt (black) goose and ruficollis is from the Latin rufus "red" and collis "necked".[4]
Description
Distribution[edit]
The red-breasted goose breeds in Arctic Siberia, mainly on the Taymyr Peninsula, with smaller populations in the Gyda and Yamal peninsulas.[7] Most winter along the northwestern shores of the Black Sea in Bulgaria, Romania and Ukraine (occasionally moving further southwest to Greece), but some winter in Azerbaijan.[7] It is a rare vagrant to Ireland and other western European areas, where it is sometimes found with flocks of Brent or barnacle geese.[6] However, since it is common in captive wildfowl collections, escapees outside its usual range are fairly frequent.[8]
A large part of the population traditionally wintered in Kirov Bay in the Caspian Sea, but in the 1960s the area became unsuitable for the geese due to the agricultural change. Vineyards and cotton replaced the cereal crops used by the wintering geese. However, catastrophic population decline was avoided because they were able to alter their migration strategy and now winter in suitable habitats in Bulgaria and the Dobrogea region of Eastern Romania.[9]
Late Pleistocene remains of the species have been found in Bulgaria,[10] and it is featured on ancient Egyptian paintings, including the famous Meidum Geese.[11]

