The wattle of a chicken is the colored flap of skin under the beak of the bird. The comb is the same type of skin on the top of the birds head. Both the wattle and comb have two functions. Chickens do not sweat, the chickens wattle & comb serves as a cooling method whereas the blood circulating inside the bird is close to the surface of these areas and is cooled by ambient temperatures. The other use of these appendages is to attract members of the opposite sex for breeding. A rooster with a strong healthy wattle and comb is likely to produce good strong offspring.
Rooster have "combs" on top of their heads and "wattles" that hang under their beak.
A chickens comb and wattles are for cooling. Birds do not sweat, the reason there are no feathers on the comb or around the wattles is to allow cooling air to pass over the blood vessels close to the surface of the appendage.
Roosters are not an aquatic species and therefore do not have gills. If you are referring to the red skin hanging under the beak, they are called wattles and they help cool the chicken during hot weather.
The word you seem to be referring to is WATTLES the flaps of tissue hanging from the "chin" under the beak. Not all roosters have them but most do. I raise Araucana chickens and this breed often does not have them. There are a few other breeds that do not develop the wattle.
Usually feathers but if you are talking about the red fleshy thing on the head of a rooster, that is called a Comb. The red flesh below the beak is called a wattle.Combs and wattles are used to help cool the bird down and to attract a mate.
Rooster have "combs" on top of their heads and "wattles" that hang under their beak.
Wattles.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! Wattles are the long dangling flabs on a cow's or rooster's neck. Cowboys applied this to the dangling flaps on a man's ears and used this term to mean he had big ears.
1. Located under the chin. 2. Meaty, red growths. 3. Chickens have two wattles 4. Both male and female 5. Wattles do not just hang there, they actually very important 6. One of the things is they cool the chicken down 7. Happens when the blood circulates from the comb to the wattles. 8. Circulating blood lowers the temperature of the chicken during the hot weather.
The special features of a rooster are the wattles, the combs, and the spurs, which will be larger on a rooster than on a hen. The feathers will also begin to become longer with more curve around the age of 3 months.
A chickens comb and wattles are for cooling. Birds do not sweat, the reason there are no feathers on the comb or around the wattles is to allow cooling air to pass over the blood vessels close to the surface of the appendage.
Wallace Wattles was born in 1860.
Roosters are not an aquatic species and therefore do not have gills. If you are referring to the red skin hanging under the beak, they are called wattles and they help cool the chicken during hot weather.
The reason for dubbing dates back to Japanese times when they used game birds and when a rooster fights they grab on to each other by the crest or wattles and so the people would dub the so that the other rooster wouldn't have less of an advantage against the opponent. Today rooster fights are illegal in many places but people that live in cold places still dub their chickens(both males and females) as a precaution against the cold because the crest and wattles are not that thick and so they get frostbite easily. Those are the main reasons for dubbing chickens.
Wattles House was created in 1895.
Wattles Mansion was created in 1907.
The word you seem to be referring to is WATTLES the flaps of tissue hanging from the "chin" under the beak. Not all roosters have them but most do. I raise Araucana chickens and this breed often does not have them. There are a few other breeds that do not develop the wattle.