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Auracana, Ameraucana; What’s the Difference?

23 September 2018
Ameraucana hen named Zelda with muffs and beard.

Ameraucana hen named “Zelda” with muffs and beard.

One of our hens is an “Ameraucana” (note spelling). She’s black in color and has beautiful streaks of gold among her black feathers along with a blue-green iridescent cloak around her neck that reflects in the sunlight. The Ameraucana breed was derived from chickens brought from Chile in the 1970’s that bore the gene that produced blue-green eggs. These original chickens had no tail. You can tell the difference between the original Araucana and the Ameraucana by noting the tail, muffs, and beard on the Ameraucana. The Ameraucana has small, round, earlobes, or absent earlobes, and their small pea cobs are red.

When we bought our Amerauacana pullet, the breeder insisted she was an Amerauacana and not an Easter Egger. That got me thinking, “What is wrong with an Easter Egger?” Turns out nothing except they have no standard and therefore cannot be shown in poultry shows. According to My Pet Chicken,Easter Eggers are not a breed per se, but a variety of chicken that does not conform to any breed standard but lays large to extra large eggs that vary in shade from blue to green to olive to aqua and sometimes even pinkish. Easter Eggers vary widely in color and conformation and are exceptionally friendly and hardy. Since they are usually quite friendly to children and humans in general, they are a great choice for a family flock. Most hatcheries mistakenly label their Easter Eggers as Ameraucanas or Araucanas (or various misspellings thereof). Easter Eggers do not qualify to be shown, since they do not conform to a breed standard.”

eggs in handWe love our blue-green eggs and will continue to keep an Ameraucana or Easter-Egger so we can enjoy these eggs of a unique color.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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