Crested chickens
Group of chicken breeds
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crested chickens are a group of ornamental chicken breeds characterised by a tuft or crest of upward-pointing feathers on the head.

History and distribution
A skull excavated in England suggests that crested chickens were present there in Roman times.[1][2] Early depictions of these birds are found in the Ornithologiae tomus alter of Ulisse Aldrovandi of 1600, and in the work of Dutch animalier painters such as Melchior d'Hondecoeter in the later seventeenth century. After the exhibition poultry breeding developed in Europe and North-America in the nineteenth century, several old crested breeds became widely known. Original crested chickens originate from the Netherlands, France, Italy, Poland, Russia, and in the Western Balkans. Apart from these breeds, crested chicken are found in Africa and Iceland.
Genetics
The development of the feather crest is based on the mutation "Crest" (Cr). Its inheritance is incomplete autosomal dominant. This means, that homozygous but also heterozygous animals show a crest, which is however more pronounced in homozygotes.[2]

Vaulted skull
List of crested chicken breeds
- Annaberger Haubenstrupphuhn
- Appenzeller Spitzhauben
- Brabanter
- Kraienkopp
- Burma
- Crèvecœur

- Dutch Crested or "Polish"
- Houdan
- Kosova Long-crowing
- Nederlandse uilebaard
- Padovana
- Pavlovskaya
- Polverara
- Posavska kukmasta kokoš
- Sultan
- Ukrainian Crested