Goose
Genus
Cereopsis*
Cape Barren Goose,
Cereopsis novaehollandiaeGenus
Cnemiornis, New Zealand Geese
*
South Island Goose,
Cnemiornis calcitrans *
North Island Goose,
Cnemiornis gracilis There are a number of mainly
southern hemisphere birds named as geese which are more correctly placed with the
shelducks in the
Tadorninae. These are:
*
Blue-winged Goose,
Cyanochen cyanopterus*
Andean Goose,
Chloephaga melanoptera*
Magellan Goose,
Chloephaga picta*
Kelp Goose,
Chloephaga hybrida*
Ashy-headed Goose,
Chloephaga poliocephala*
Ruddy-headed Goose,
Chloephaga rubidiceps*
Orinoco Goose,
Neochen jubata*
Egyptian Goose,
Alopochen aegyptiacusThe
Spur-winged Goose,
Plectropterus gambensis, is most closely related to the shelducks, but distinct enough to warrant its own subfamily, the
Plectropterinae.
The three
perching ducks in the genus
Nettapus are named as pygmy geese, such as the
Cotton Pygmy Goose,
Nettapus javanica, but are true
ducks.
The unusual
Magpie-goose is in a family of its own, the Anseranatidae.
Goose in its origins is one of the oldest words of the
Indo-European languages, the modern names deriving from the proto-Indo-European root,
ghans, hence Sanskrit
hamsa (feminine
hamsii), Latin
anser, Greek
khén etc.
In the
Germanic languages, the root word led to Old English
gos with the plural
gés, German
Gans and Old Norse
gas. Other modern derivatives are Russian
gus and Old Irish
géiss; the family name of the cleric
Jan Hus is derived from the Czech derivative
husa.
In non-technical use, the male goose is called a "gander" (Anglo-Saxon
gandra) and the female is the "goose" (
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913))
*
wildfowl*
waterfowl*
Domesticated goose, which includes cooking and folklore
*
Goose videos on the Internet Bird Collection