ILLUSTRATION
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PHOTOS
CONSERVATION STATUS
The Bean Goose is rated as Least Concern. This bird has a range reaching up to 10 million square kilometers and a population that is estimated to be as many as nearly 900,000 individual birds. The Bean Goose can be found throughout Europe and has also been spotted in countries in Asia as well. The population of the Bean Goose has remained steady for the last several years. As a result, there is no immediate concern regarding the population of this bird species.
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SUMMARY
Overview
Bean Goose: Large goose, scaled brown upperparts, white underparts. Head, neck are dark brown. Black bill with yellow-orange saddle. Tail is dark with white undertail coverts. Legs and feet are orange. Feeds on plants, seeds, fruits. Strong direct flight on steady wing beats. Flies in V formation.
Range and Habitat
Bean Goose: Breeds in northern Eurasia, but is rare to casual spring visitor to western Alaska and the Bering Sea islands. Preferred habitats include tundra, wet grasslands, and flooded fields.
SONGS AND CALLS
Listen to Call
Bean Goose
Voice Text
"ung-ank"
INTERESTING FACTS
- The Bean Goose gets its English and scientific names from its habit in the past of grazing in bean field stubbles in winter.
- They were regarded as a common winter visitor to northern and eastern Britain during the first half of the 19th century. A widespread decline in numbers began in the 1860's and 1870's until in the early part of the 20th century only a few flocks remained.
- They show a preference for pastures which have high proportions of perennial ryegrass. They are intolerant of disturbance and prefer feeding fields with no other grazing livestock during the winter months and choose open areas with unobstructed sight lines both for feeding and for roosting.
- A group of geese has many collective nouns, including a "blizzard", "chevron", "knot", "plump", and "string" of geese.
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