Japanese Bantam Høns

Japanese Bantam

Gallus gallus domesticus

Morsom Fakta

The short-leg gene in Japanese Bantams is lethal when inherited from both parents — eggs with two copies of the gene never hatch. This means every nest of Japanese Bantam eggs contains approximately 25% unfertilised-appearing eggs that are actually non-viable homozygous embryos, a fact known to Japanese breeders for centuries.

An ancient true bantam that has been kept in Japan for over 350 years, featuring a uniquely short-legged, upright-tailed silhouette unlike any other bantam. The tail of the Japanese Bantam is carried nearly vertically — touching or almost touching the back of the head — giving it a distinctive 'letter J' profile. Short legs are caused by a gene that is lethal in homozygous form, meaning every breeding produces approximately one third of chicks that do not survive — a genetic characteristic unique to this breed.

🏷️ Rase

Japanese Bantam

💭 Temperament

Calm, docile, friendly, adaptable, good in confinement

📏 Størrelse

Small (0.50-0.68 kg)

Levetid

5-8 years

🎨 Farger

Many varieties — black-tailed white, black-tailed buff, black, white, grey, birchen

🌍 Opprinnelse

Japan; kept at Imperial Court since at least 1635

🏠 Habitat

Enclosed housing; short legs mean wet ground is harmful

🍽️ Kosthold

Bantam pellets or crumbs; limited forager due to leg length

🎯 Formål

Ornamental

🥚 Eggfarge

Tinted

👑 Kammtype

Single

🏅 EE-klasse

True Bantam