A Canada Goose the Size of a Pigeon?

“The Canada Goose at Kennedy Lake is quite tame.” (photo by Brent Myers via Flickr Creative Commons license)

7 April 2025

UPDATE: Thank you Amber VanStrien for pointing out that Wild Bird Fund posted this “news” on APRIL FOOL’S DAY … And I fell for it. However, there really are dwarf geese that are less than half the size (44%) of a normal Canada Goose. See revised text below.

Typical Canada geese, like the one shown above, are large birds as tall as our knees when relaxed and foraging and bigger when angry. You can’t hold one in the palm of your hand so I was amazed to see this photo of a Canada goose in New York City that is only the size of a pigeon! (Hah! It’s an April Fool’s joke.)

“Lilligoosian” was supposedly in rehab at the Wild Bird Fund on Columbus Ave, Upper West Side, NYC –> 1/10th the size of a normal Canada goose, half the size of a mallard, and just a few grams heavier than a male pigeon.

Do very small birds like this exist?

David Sibley explains in his article Do “dwarf” birds exist? that “continued poor nutrition [during the gosling stage] results in birds that never reach full size and remain smaller than normal, as several studies on Snow and Canada Geese have shown.” For instance, from a study in 2015:

Canada goose goslings fed low-protein (10%) diets were on average 44% lighter in body mass, had slower growth rates and were delayed >20 days in reaching 90% of asymptotic size compared with Canada goose goslings fed 18% protein.

— from Ecological implications of reduced forage quality on growth and survival of sympatric geese

So “Lilligoosian,” the pigeon-sized Canada goose, was probably Photoshop’d but there are such things as dwarf geese. Goslings can be stunted by unhealthy food and reach only half the size of a normal Canada goose in adulthood.

One thought on “A Canada Goose the Size of a Pigeon?

  1. Another reason to not feed birds bread. There is nothing in bread that is good for birds. It just fills up their stomach and leaves no room for the nutrients that they get from foraging.

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