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  2. Chicken breeds recognized by the American Poultry Association

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_breeds_recognized...

    A red pyle Dutch Bantam cock. This class contains all the bantam breeds with a single comb, excluding the game bantams: [1] [3] Ancona (single comb) Andalusian; Australorp; Campine; Catalana; Delaware; Dorking (single comb) Dutch; Holland; Japanese; Java; Jersey Giant; Lakenvelder; Lamona; Leghorn (single comb) Minorca (single comb) Naked-neck ...

  3. Silkie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silkie

    Silkies are considered a bantam breed in some countries, but this varies according to region and many breed standards class them officially as large fowl; the bantam Silkie is actually a separate variety most of the time. Almost all North American strains of the breed are bantam-sized, but in Europe the standard-sized is the original version.

  4. Sussex chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sussex_chicken

    The buff has the same markings, but with greenish-black on a golden-buff ground. The silver is similar to the light, but has grey thighs and a dark breast with silver lacing. [2]: 293 The red has the same markings as the light, but the base colour is a rich dark red throughout. The speckled is a rich dark mahogany colour, each feather with a ...

  5. Japanese Bantam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_bantam

    The Japanese Bantam or Chabo (Japanese: 矮鶏) is a Japanese breed of ornamental chicken. It is a true bantam breed, meaning that it has no large fowl counterpart. It characterised by very short legs – the result of hereditary chondrodystrophy – and a large upright tail that reaches much higher than the head of the bird.

  6. Wyandotte chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wyandotte_chicken

    The gold-laced Wyandotte was produced by breeding silver-laced hens with gold-spangled Hamburg and partridge Cochin cocks, the white Wyandotte was a sport of the silver-laced, and the buff variant came from crossing the silver-laced with buff Cochin stock; [2]: 311 the black variant was also a sport, of both the silver-laced and the gold-laced. [6]

  7. Rosecomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosecomb

    Rosecombs are bantam chickens, and are among those known as true bantams, meaning they are not a miniaturised version of a large fowl. Rosecombs are one of the oldest and most popular bantam breeds in showing, and thus have numerous variations within the breed. An ornamental chicken, they are poor egg layers and not suited for meat production.

  8. Vorwerk chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vorwerk_chicken

    Bantams are also dual-purpose, but (like all bantams) lay smaller eggs and fewer of them. Vorwerks are hardy, adaptable birds with economical appetites. In temperament, they are alert and active, but not necessarily flighty. In terms of plumage, their head, neck and tail are solid black, with the rest a buff color.

  9. Booted Bantam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Booted_Bantam

    The Booted Bantam or Dutch Booted Bantam is a European breed of true bantam chicken. It is characterised by abundant feathering on the feet and shanks, which gives it a "booted" appearance; and by vulture hocks , long stiff downward-pointing feathers on backs of the thighs, [ 4 ] : 139 from which the Dutch name Sabelpoot ("sabre-legged") derives.