Easter Egger's and Ameraucana's = same thing

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Very probably. The easiest way to tell is do they meet an APA color.

For example if you get a BARRED rock, it's a barred plymouth rock. A WHITE leghorn, a BUFF orpington, a BLACK australorp, etc.
If your chick came in a bin without a specific color label (Such as Blue, Black, Splash) it was probably a mixed breed/landrace chicken, not a bird that meets an APA breed standard.

Also if they have green or yellow legs and not slate or grey legs.
 

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Chickens all have open studbooks like rabbits, right? So wouldn't the difference mainly be whether they are being bred "to a standard" or not? A hatchery can have both colorful egg birds bred in random pens and theoretically "pure" (for such as that definition can ever exist in animals with open studbooks, which I think it's awesome that they are kept open) examples of the same birds, but since they are breeding for egg laying ability over anything else, you usually get smaller, weedier-built chickens compared to people that care more about keel depth, tail set, etc. So they wouldn't be winning shows either way.

I forget if it's 4 or 8 generations, but I think with both rabbits and fowl (may be more livestock species) you can register it as a purebred after a certain number of generations go by... That's how we get "more" colors in breeds that don't currently have 'em. It causes a headache trying to breed unwanted traits back out, but that's penalized on its own just fine by judges adhering to standard.
 
Chickens all have open studbooks like rabbits, right? So wouldn't the difference mainly be whether they are being bred "to a standard" or not? A hatchery can have both colorful egg birds bred in random pens and theoretically "pure" (for such as that definition can ever exist in animals with open studbooks, which I think it's awesome that they are kept open) examples of the same birds, but since they are breeding for egg laying ability over anything else, you usually get smaller, weedier-built chickens compared to people that care more about keel depth, tail set, etc. So they wouldn't be winning shows either way.

I forget if it's 4 or 8 generations, but I think with both rabbits and fowl (may be more livestock species) you can register it as a purebred after a certain number of generations go by... That's how we get "more" colors in breeds that don't currently have 'em. It causes a headache trying to breed unwanted traits back out, but that's penalized on its own just fine by judges adhering to standard.
In the USA, chickens do not have a studbook at all. And I've never heard of anyone registering a chicken.

If you take a chicken to a show, either it looks right or it doesn't. If it looks wrong, it gets disqualified. If it looks right, that is all there is to it: no checking of ancestors at all.

Of course if you want to breed chickens it is important to know if they come from a line that breeds true for the traits you want, or if they are likely to produce a bunch of variable offspring, but that is not because of anything imposed by any external authority.

Yes, I think you're right about the main difference being whether they're bred to a standard or not. And given how many other hatchery "purebreds" are how far from their standard, it does seem a little odd to make such a big deal about Ameraucanas and not all the other breeds. (I grant that most of the other breeds are at least trying to belong to a recognized color, while mixed-color flocks of "Ameraucanas" are not doing that. I've never seen a hatchery selling "Wyandottes" or "Leghorns" that have many colors mixed and interbreeding in the same flock.)
 

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