Search Perform an advanced search query SOFTPEDIA
 
SOFTPEDIA
Updated one minute ago
HomeSubmit a program for being reviewedAdvertise on our websiteGet help on surfing our websitesSend us your feedbackGet information about our XML/RSS backend and how to use itBrowse the news archiveVisit our discussion forumVizitati forumul in limba romana
KLIP
  1. HOME
  2. SCIENCE
  3. TECHNOLOGY
  4. WEBMASTER
  5. SECURITY
  6. MICROSOFT
  7. LINUX
  8. APPLE
  9. GAMES
  10. TELECOMS
  11. REVIEWS
  12. ENTERTAINMENT
  13. EDITORIALS
  14. INTERVIEWS
  15. RSS
Welcome!
Hello, Guest

Login if you have a Softpedia.com account.

Otherwise, register for one.

SCI PRY

The Longest Tail: The Onagadori Cocks

- The result of three mutations

By: Stefan Anitei, Science Editor

If bonsai proved that the Japanese people can handle the art of "dwarfism", with Onagadori cocks they show how they can deal with gigantism, too.

Onagadori ("Honourable Fowl" in Japanese) is a breed of domestic chicken and the cocks can have a tail reaching 10 m! This is an unchallengeable record amongst birds and perhaps some extinct huge sauropod dinosaurs could have had tails longer than 10 m!

The onagadori cocks can be colored in Black-breasted Red, Black-breasted Silver, Goishi (a
pale Black-breasted Golden) and White. The leg color is willow in the Black-breasted variations and yellow in the Whites; blue legs are not accepted.

They grow in special cages in which the feathers of their tails are rolled up like a curl and suspended on the walls for protection. At about ten years of life the cocks attain this impressive tail length.

The onagadori cocks are the result of a mutation in "nm" (non-molting) genes that causes the extravagantly long growth of the tail feathers, but they also carry the "gt" and "sg" genes for rapid growth in tail feathers. Due to "nm" mutation, their tail feathers never molt, if kept in the best of conditions with high levels of animal husbandry, growing for the life of the roosters.

A portion of the tail does partially molt its sickle feathers annually and the body feathers may molt only every second or third year. The onagadori hens molt normally.

Till now, they have not been found in other countries. In Japan these cocks are protected. The record was reached by an Onagadori cock with a 11.3 m (38 ft) long tail.

The mutation that produced the Onagadori could have emerged on the breed Shokoku in the middle of the Edo Period (1600--1868). The Prince Yamanouchi in the Kochi Prefecture on the southern peninsula of Shikoku had the helmets and spears of his soldiers adorned with long rooster feathers for special occasions. The serfs who kept Onagadori chickens and delivered the long feathers were exempt from taxes. In about 1655, a steady selection for longer feathers was made.
During the Taisho Period (1912 – 1926), Onagadori tail feathers had already reached lengths over 6 m (20 ft).

The Onagadori cocks differ from the Phoenix breed, also originated in Japan and with long tail feathers, but no so long.

MORE RELATED ARTICLES: Did Dinosaurs Have Feathers? Top 10 Outstanding Parrot Traits Baby Dino Fossil Explains How the Huge Beasts Grew An Ancient Long-Necked Flying Dragon What's the Origin of Human Languages? The Chicken Proves It: Polynesians Entered America Before Columbus Which Are the Targets of the Vaccines of the Future? World's Smallest Dog Baboons on Pills A Twin Brother Means Infertility and Less Sex for His Twin Sister!
 
Comments | Link here | Subscribe
Print | Send to friend
Today's News | Yesterday's News

Search:


24th of July 2007, 18:46 GMT | Copyright (c) 2007 Softpedia | Contact:
Read by 576 user(s) | Rating: | 0 vote(s) so far | Cast your vote:
The Longest Tail: The Onagadori Cocks - USER OPINIONS




We are sorry, there are no opinions available for this article.






SHARE YOUR OPINION ABOUT The Longest Tail: The Onagadori Cocks


Only registered and logged in users can post comments.
Click here to login, or register.








DO YOU WANT TO CONTACT US?  

If you have some comments or you want to send us some information you can send us an email directly to .
You can use the form below for the same purpose.
Your full name: (at least 3 characters)
Your email address: (at least 5 characters)
Message subject: (at least 5 characters)
Message text:
(at least 10 characters)
Type in the result:
 
 



© 2001 - 2007 Softpedia. All rights reserved.
Softpedia™ and Softpedia™ logo are registered trademarks of SoftNews NET SRL.
Copyright Information | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Softpedia | Update your software | Archive