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  2. Fayoumi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fayoumi

    Hens lay a good number of small white or cream eggs. [ 1 ] : 116 They are not given to broodiness as pullets , but can be when they reach two or three years of age. The breed is fast to mature, with hens laying by four and half months, and cockerels crowing at five or six weeks.

  3. Chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken

    Fertile chicken eggs hatch at the end of the incubation period, about 21 days; the chick uses its egg tooth to break out of the shell. [34] Hens remain on the nest for about two days after the first chick hatches; during this time the newly hatched chicks feed by absorbing the internal yolk sac . [ 42 ]

  4. Nankin Bantam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nankin_bantam

    Their eggs are very small and a creamy white colour. As with some other bantam breeds, broody Nankin hens were traditionally used to incubate the eggs of game birds such as pheasant, quail and partridge. [10] [13]: 116 The breed matures slowly, and makes a poor meat producer. [citation needed]

  5. Sebright chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sebright_chicken

    The Sebright (IPA: / ˈ s iː b r aɪ t /) is a British breed of bantam chicken. It is a true bantam – a miniature bird with no corresponding large version – and is one of the oldest recorded British bantam breeds. [8] It is named after Sir John Saunders Sebright, who created it as an ornamental breed by selective breeding in the early ...

  6. Bantam (poultry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bantam_(poultry)

    The Sebright is a true bantam chicken breed Japanese bantam chick (left) compared to an Orpington chick. A bantam is any small variety of fowl, usually of chicken or duck.Most large chicken breeds and several breeds of duck have a bantam counterpart, which is much smaller than the standard-sized fowl, but otherwise similar in most or all respects.

  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.