What is the difference between an Araucana and Ameraucana chicken? If you’re confused, you’re not alone. Even the experts disagree on some aspects of the histories of these breeds. I hope the following clears up a few of the basics. The differences between an Araucana, Ameraucana and an Easter Egger chickens.

ARAUCANAS

Araucanas were recognized by the American Poultry Association (APA) as a breed in 1976. They are blue egg layers with yellow skin, no tails, no beards and no muffs. Araucanas can possess ear tufts, which are feathers that grow from a slender, fleshy flap just below the ear. The APA recognizes five colors of Araucana: Black, Black Breasted Red, Golden Duckwing, Silver Duckwing and White.

Araucanas are blue egg layers with yellow skin, no tails, no beards and no muffs. Araucanas possess ear tufts, which are feathers that grow from a slender, fleshy flap just below the ear.

Araucanas were first bred in the United States in the 1930’s. They came from a cross between two breeds from Northern Chile, Colloncas and Quetros. Colloncas have no ear tufts but are rumpless and lay blue eggs; Quetros have ear tufts and tails but do not lay blue eggs.”

Double tufted Araucana cockerel
This Araucana rooster is rumpless and double tufted.
This Araucana rooster is rumpless and double tufted

Araucanas are frequently confused with Ameraucanas and Easter Eggers, not only due to misinformation, but often knowingly by unscrupulous sellers. Araucanas are rare in the United States, likely due to the genetic challenges in breeding. The tufted gene in Araucanas is a lethal gene. Two copies of the gene cause nearly 100% mortality in offspring (usually between days 18-21 of incubation). Because no living Araucana possesses two copies of the tufted gene, breeding any two tufted birds leads to half of the resulting chicks being tufted with one copy of the gene, one quarter of the chicks being clean-faced with no copy of the gene, and one quarter of the embryos dead in the shell, having received two copies of the gene.

5 day old black Araucana chick via www.The-Chicken-Chick.com
5 day old black Araucana chick

http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/poultry/chickens/araucana/
http://www.araucana.net/

Ameraucanas lay blue eggs. Other traits include a pea comb, white skin, full tails, muffs and beards (always together), and slate or black legs; they have no ear tufts. www.The-Chicken-Chick.com

AMERAUCANAS

Ameraucanas have been bred from different strains of Araucanas since at least 1960 in the United States. The American Poultry Association recognized Ameraucanas as a breed in 1984. For an extraordinarily thorough and fascinating history of Ameraucanas, click here. Ameraucanas lay blue eggs. Other traits include a pea comb, white skin, full tails, muffs and beards (always together), and slate or black legs; they have no ear tufts. The APA recognizes these colors: Black, Blue, Blue Wheaten, Brown Red, Silver, Wheaten and White.

While Ameraucanas are more common in the United States than Araucanas, they are available only through reputable breeders, regardless of advertisements by hatcheries and other large-scale, distribution sources. If you are in the market for Ameraucanas and see an advertisement for "Americanas," be forewarned: there is no such breed.
Ameraucanas have beards AND muffs, Araucanas can have ear tufts.

While Ameraucanas are more common in the United States than Araucanas, they are available primarily through reputable breeders. If you are in the market for Ameraucanas and see an advertisement for “Americanas,” be forewarned: there is no such breed. There is no “I” in Ameraucana. The misleading spelling is usually intended to imply that that Easter Eggers are Ameraucanas, which is wrong on many levels.

Ameraucanas have beards AND muffs, Araucanas can have ear tufts.

 

 Easter Eggers lay a rainbow of egg colors, including: any hue of blue and green and even pink on occasion. Other common EE traits include pea combs and wattles that are either small or absent.

EASTER EGGERS

The terms “Americana” and “Americauna” are a marketing tactics for selling hybrids known as Easter Eggers with spelling deceptively similar to the Ameraucana breed name. EEs are not an APA recognized breed, they are a mix of different breeds with one parent carrying a blue egg-laying gene. According to the Easter Egg Club of America, EEs are “the most popular chicken in America today.”*Easter Eggers can lay a rainbow of egg colors, including: any hue of blue or brown or any combination of the two. Traits include pea combs and wattles that are either small or absent, usually possess greenish legs and beards with muffs. EEs are found in an infinite array of feather colors, which makes them a beautiful and unique hybrid chicken.

EEs, sometimes referred to as ‘Rainbow Layers,’ are essentially descendants of Araucanas and Ameraucanas on one side of the family, and any other breed on the other side of the family. Easter Eggers do not breed true. To ‘breed true’ means that purebred chicks resemble both parents.

The surest indications that a seller is offering Easter Eggers for sale are:

  • Easter Eggers will not have a color variety to choose from. In other words, you can’t choose a buff Easter Egger, a white Easter Egger, a blue Easter Egger, a lavender Easter Egger, etc. because they do not breed true. Only pure bred birds will be labelled for sale with a choice of color varieties.
  • Easter Eggers will cost less than $10 dollars per chick. Pure bred birds are much more costly than $3.00
  • Easter Eggers are often mislabelled “Americana, Americauana, Araucana/Ameraucana, Americana/Easter Egger” or some similarly confusing name.
Araucana + Marans = Olive Egger via The Chicken Chick®
Egg from an Olive Egger hen
Egg from my Olive Egger hen

OLIVE EGGER

An Olive Egger is a specific type of Easter Egger, that is produced by crossing any dark brown egg-laying breed (Barnevelder, Empordanesa, Marans, Pendesenca or Welsummers) with a blue egg-laying breed (Ameraucanas, Araucanas, Cream Legbars). Hens produced from these pairings are hybrids that will produce olive green eggs.

Day old Olive Egger chicks (Black Copper Marans x Ameraucana)
Day old Olive Egger chicks (Black Copper Marans x Ameraucana)
 a chicken that is produced by crossing any dark brown egg-laying breed (Barnevelder, Empordanesa, Marans, Pendesenca or Welsummers) with a blue egg-laying breed (Ameraucanas, Araucanas, Cream Legbar). Hens produced from these pairings are hybrids that will produce olive green eggs.
Blaze, the Black Copper Marans rooster & Clarice, the Blue Ameraucana hen produce Olive Egger chicks who will lay olive green eggs.

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What is the difference between an Araucana and Ameraucana chicken? If you’re confused, you’re not alone. Even the experts disagree on some aspects of the histories of these breeds. I hope the following clears up a few of the basics. The differences between an Araucana, Ameraucana and an Easter Egger chickens.

ARAUCANAS

Araucanas were recognized by the American Poultry Association (APA) as a breed in 1976. They are blue egg layers with yellow skin, no tails, no beards and no muffs. Araucanas can possess ear tufts, which are feathers that grow from a slender, fleshy flap just below the ear. The APA recognizes five colors of Araucana: Black, Black Breasted Red, Golden Duckwing, Silver Duckwing and White.

Araucanas are blue egg layers with yellow skin, no tails, no beards and no muffs. Araucanas possess ear tufts, which are feathers that grow from a slender, fleshy flap just below the ear.

Araucanas were first bred in the United States in the 1930’s. They came from a cross between two breeds from Northern Chile, Colloncas and Quetros. Colloncas have no ear tufts but are rumpless and lay blue eggs; Quetros have ear tufts and tails but do not lay blue eggs.”

Double tufted Araucana cockerel
This Araucana rooster is rumpless and double tufted.
This Araucana rooster is rumpless and double tufted

Araucanas are frequently confused with Ameraucanas and Easter Eggers, not only due to misinformation, but often knowingly by unscrupulous sellers. Araucanas are rare in the United States, likely due to the genetic challenges in breeding. The tufted gene in Araucanas is a lethal gene. Two copies of the gene cause nearly 100% mortality in offspring (usually between days 18-21 of incubation). Because no living Araucana possesses two copies of the tufted gene, breeding any two tufted birds leads to half of the resulting chicks being tufted with one copy of the gene, one quarter of the chicks being clean-faced with no copy of the gene, and one quarter of the embryos dead in the shell, having received two copies of the gene.

5 day old black Araucana chick via www.The-Chicken-Chick.com
5 day old black Araucana chick

http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/poultry/chickens/araucana/
http://www.araucana.net/

Ameraucanas lay blue eggs. Other traits include a pea comb, white skin, full tails, muffs and beards (always together), and slate or black legs; they have no ear tufts. www.The-Chicken-Chick.com

AMERAUCANAS

Ameraucanas have been bred from different strains of Araucanas since at least 1960 in the United States. The American Poultry Association recognized Ameraucanas as a breed in 1984. For an extraordinarily thorough and fascinating history of Ameraucanas, click here. Ameraucanas lay blue eggs. Other traits include a pea comb, white skin, full tails, muffs and beards (always together), and slate or black legs; they have no ear tufts. The APA recognizes these colors: Black, Blue, Blue Wheaten, Brown Red, Silver, Wheaten and White.

While Ameraucanas are more common in the United States than Araucanas, they are available only through reputable breeders, regardless of advertisements by hatcheries and other large-scale, distribution sources. If you are in the market for Ameraucanas and see an advertisement for "Americanas," be forewarned: there is no such breed.
Ameraucanas have beards AND muffs, Araucanas can have ear tufts.

While Ameraucanas are more common in the United States than Araucanas, they are available primarily through reputable breeders. If you are in the market for Ameraucanas and see an advertisement for “Americanas,” be forewarned: there is no such breed. There is no “I” in Ameraucana. The misleading spelling is usually intended to imply that that Easter Eggers are Ameraucanas, which is wrong on many levels.

Ameraucanas have beards AND muffs, Araucanas can have ear tufts.

 

 Easter Eggers lay a rainbow of egg colors, including: any hue of blue and green and even pink on occasion. Other common EE traits include pea combs and wattles that are either small or absent.

EASTER EGGERS

The terms “Americana” and “Americauna” are a marketing tactics for selling hybrids known as Easter Eggers with spelling deceptively similar to the Ameraucana breed name. EEs are not an APA recognized breed, they are a mix of different breeds with one parent carrying a blue egg-laying gene. According to the Easter Egg Club of America, EEs are “the most popular chicken in America today.”*Easter Eggers can lay a rainbow of egg colors, including: any hue of blue or brown or any combination of the two. Traits include pea combs and wattles that are either small or absent, usually possess greenish legs and beards with muffs. EEs are found in an infinite array of feather colors, which makes them a beautiful and unique hybrid chicken.

EEs, sometimes referred to as ‘Rainbow Layers,’ are essentially descendants of Araucanas and Ameraucanas on one side of the family, and any other breed on the other side of the family. Easter Eggers do not breed true. To ‘breed true’ means that purebred chicks resemble both parents.

The surest indications that a seller is offering Easter Eggers for sale are:

  • Easter Eggers will not have a color variety to choose from. In other words, you can’t choose a buff Easter Egger, a white Easter Egger, a blue Easter Egger, a lavender Easter Egger, etc. because they do not breed true. Only pure bred birds will be labelled for sale with a choice of color varieties.
  • Easter Eggers will cost less than $10 dollars per chick. Pure bred birds are much more costly than $3.00
  • Easter Eggers are often mislabelled “Americana, Americauana, Araucana/Ameraucana, Americana/Easter Egger” or some similarly confusing name.
Araucana + Marans = Olive Egger via The Chicken Chick®
Egg from an Olive Egger hen
Egg from my Olive Egger hen

OLIVE EGGER

An Olive Egger is a specific type of Easter Egger, that is produced by crossing any dark brown egg-laying breed (Barnevelder, Empordanesa, Marans, Pendesenca or Welsummers) with a blue egg-laying breed (Ameraucanas, Araucanas, Cream Legbars). Hens produced from these pairings are hybrids that will produce olive green eggs.

Day old Olive Egger chicks (Black Copper Marans x Ameraucana)
Day old Olive Egger chicks (Black Copper Marans x Ameraucana)
 a chicken that is produced by crossing any dark brown egg-laying breed (Barnevelder, Empordanesa, Marans, Pendesenca or Welsummers) with a blue egg-laying breed (Ameraucanas, Araucanas, Cream Legbar). Hens produced from these pairings are hybrids that will produce olive green eggs.
Blaze, the Black Copper Marans rooster & Clarice, the Blue Ameraucana hen produce Olive Egger chicks who will lay olive green eggs.
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lindey
12 years ago

thanks for the clarification! i am currently researching since the hubby gave me the go-ahead for backyard chickens. i found you on mypetchicken :o) their chicken match tool selected ameraucanas for us, but i do see they might be a bit harder to obtain. i'm curious which of these three is your favorite -if you can choose? or really…just what you like most about each? my 3 year old daughter loves animals and is so excited about chickens…sweet breeds are high priority for us along with good egg layers…of course it doesn't hurt if the eggs are pretty :o) your… Read more »

Kathy Mormino
12 years ago

@Diane: I like to think of it this way to simplify things: Araucanas are obvious- no butts. Easter Eggers are the most common but aren't a real breed, they're the mongrels of the blue-egg world; they're a mix of a pure-bred blue egg layer and anything else.

Diane
Diane
12 years ago

very interesting, but still very confusing to me. Thanks for sharing.

Anonymous
Anonymous
13 years ago

When I was a girl they were all 'araucana' but recently I started shopping for hens to share with my daughter & encountered all these varieties. It got so confusing. THANK YOU for clarifying this confusion. I am out to get my trio of 'easter eggers'. :)

Kcarville
13 years ago

That was AWESOME. I had no idea, and I am new to chickens. I am so grateful for all your help, and education. Cock-a-doodle-doooooo

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