Profile Summary
Wild African pygmy-goose species; not an ordinary domestic breed for EU backyard keeping.
Temperament
Housing
Water
Feeding
Health
Legal Note
EU Country Rules
| Country | Status | Note | Checked |
|---|---|---|---|
| Austria | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Belgium | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Bulgaria | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Croatia | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Cyprus | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Czech Republic | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Denmark | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Estonia | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Finland | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| France | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Germany | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Greece | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Hungary | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Ireland | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Italy | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Latvia | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Lithuania | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Luxembourg | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Malta | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Netherlands | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Poland | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Portugal | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Romania | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Slovakia | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Slovenia | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Spain | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
| Sweden | Not Allowed | wild species entry; not treated as an ordinary domestic breed allowed entry | 2026-04-23 |
Recommended Products
Full Profile
African Pygmy-Goose is not a normal domestic duck breed and should not be presented to EU backyard users as if it were equivalent to Pekin, Saxony, or Welsh Harlequin. This profile belongs in a full duck database because it is a real duck species with distinct ecology, behaviour, climate fit, and welfare implications, but the correct framing is different from a domestic breed page. For ordinary private keepers in Europe, the first question is legal and practical suitability, not laying rate or beginner friendliness. In the Duck-o-pedia system this species should therefore sit under a wild-species logic rather than a standard domestic-breed logic. That is why the country-rules layer for this entry should not mark it as an ordinary allowed domestic breed entry. In management terms, African Pygmy-Goose is a flock-oriented wild duck or duck-like waterfowl species associated with natural wetland or open-water behaviour that does not map neatly onto normal small-garden domestic keeping. The species should be thought of as requiring specialist handling, secure containment, and a much higher standard of welfare planning than a typical domestic backyard duck. It is not a realistic beginner project. Socially, these birds are best understood as group birds rather than solitary pets, and any keeper who tried to treat one like a tame garden duck would quickly run into welfare and legal problems. Wild species can be stress-sensitive, prone to panic injury, harder to contain safely, and less tolerant of frequent handling than true domestic breeds. Water access is not optional here. A true wild waterfowl setup needs reliable, clean, species-appropriate water access that supports normal behaviour, comfort, and plumage condition. Deep water or a specialist wetland-style enclosure is part of the core setup rather than a decorative extra. The same goes for enclosure design. A basic backyard run is not enough. Flying ability, fear response, climate exposure, and biosecurity all matter. Species from warm regions also raise obvious climate questions in temperate Europe, especially if people imagine outdoor year-round keeping in ordinary hobby conditions. Even where survival might be possible in a controlled collection, that does not make the species suitable for average domestic keeping. Feeding also differs from standard domestic practice. A wild species may browse, graze, dabble, dive, or filter-feed in ways that are not matched by a simplistic one-bag poultry approach. In captivity, mismatched diet, stress, and poor water hygiene can damage feather quality, body condition, and overall welfare quickly. Ducklings, if they were ever managed in lawful specialist conditions, would need much more careful rearing than a normal domestic backyard keeper expects. The practical health picture is therefore dominated by management risk: stress, poor enclosure design, unsuitable climate exposure, dirty water, transport and handling strain, and problems caused by forcing a wild species into a domestic model. For Duck-o-pedia readers in the EU, the useful message is clear. African Pygmy-Goose may be an interesting species, but it is not an ordinary domestic-breed choice for hobby keeping. It belongs in the database as a wild species profile with legal caution, specialist-care framing, and a country-rules status that does not treat it as a normal allowed domestic duck.