Ko Shamo Hühner

Ko Shamo

Gallus gallus domesticus

Wissenswertes

The Ko Shamo's breast is partially naked — the feathers on the front of the keel are sparse or absent, a feature that is not a defect but a defining characteristic of the breed standard. In Japanese aesthetics, this exposed skin on the chest was considered evidence of the bird's muscular development and fighting heritage. The Ko Shamo may weigh less than a large apple, yet displays more personality and presence per gram than almost any other bantam.

A Japanese true bantam derived from the larger Shamo fighting breed, the Ko Shamo ('Ko' meaning small) is a miniature version of one of Japan's most ancient game breeds. Like its large counterpart, the Ko Shamo has an upright, forward-leaning posture, extremely hard and sparse feathering that leaves parts of the breast bare, a broad flat skull, and strong legs. It is kept entirely as an ornamental and exhibition bird in Europe, where it was introduced by Japanese poultry enthusiasts. The EE recognises the Ko Shamo as a true bantam breed. Despite its small size — cocks weigh only around 700–900 grams — it carries itself with the authority and presence of a much larger bird.

🏷️ Rasse

Ko Shamo

💭 Temperament

Bold, independent, proud bearing; males can be aggressive toward each other

📏 Größe

Small (0.7-0.9 kg)

Lebenserwartung

6-10 years

🎨 Farben

All colours permitted — wheaten, black, blue, grey; sparse, hard feathering with bare breast patches

🌍 Herkunft

Japan — miniature variant of Shamo; standardised as a true bantam in Japan and later EE

🏠 Lebensraum

Sheltered housing; managed individually or in pairs due to male aggression

🍽️ Ernährung

Small amounts of high-quality feed; active for its size

🎯 Zweck

Ornamental

🥚 Eifarbe

Tinted

👑 Kammtyp

Pea

🏅 EE-Klasse

True Bantam