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Serama

The Serama breed originated in Malaysia, apparently through the crossing of Japanese and Malaysian bantams.

General Information

Breed Purpose
Ornamental
Comb
Single
Broodiness
Frequent
Climate Tolerance
Heat
Egg Productivity
Low
Egg Size
Small
Egg Color
Light Brown
Breed Temperament
Friendly, Easily handled, Calm, Bears confinement well, Quiet, Docile
Breed Colors/Varieties
This breed is not standardized yet. The Serama Council of North America is working towards ABA and APA acceptance of the white serama first. The currently recognized colors of the SCNA are White, Blue, Wheaton, Black-Breasted Red, Black, and Black-Tail Buff. These should be recognized by the ABA and APA after the white serama. A popular variety of the serama is the silkied serama. They are accepted at SCNA sanctioned shows.
Breed Size
Bantam
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The Serama breed originated in Malaysia, apparently through the crossing of Japanese and Malaysian bantams. The modern breed is attributed to the efforts of Wee Yean Een from Kelantan, who named the breed "Serama" after Rama, the title of the Kings of Thailand. There are no written standards for the breed in its native country, though they do have an overall guide on scoring and judging for competitions in Malaysia. Many breeders have a style or type that they breed to, but breeders often keep several "styles". Hence there is quite a lot of diversity in Malaysia.

In the USA, the Serama breed is promoted by a couple organisations, the The American serama association (ASA) and the Serama Council of North America (SCNA). This council helped to introduce the Serama to North America in various National Poultry shows. In the spring of 2004 a Serama only-show, known as the Cajun Classic, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana was held. The "American Serama" as put forth by the Serama Council of North America has gained acceptance by the APA and the American Bantam Association, as of April 2011. In early 2012, another group known as the American Serama Association was formed to help gain APA and ABA acceptance of more varieties of Serama.

In the UK, Seramas were initially imported in 2004. Birds were imported from both the US and directly from Malaysia. In 2005, a small group of Serama owners and enthusiast decided to form the "Serama Club of Great Britain", the first Serama club in the UK. They went on to established the standard for the Serama breed for the UK. Seramas are still relatively rare and expensive in much of mainland Europe, with the Netherlands probably having the largest number of Seramas outside the UK. Most of the stock in the Netherlands are descendent from birds/eggs imported from America and from the UK.

In France and other European countries they are increasing in popularity with 4 classes of serums.

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Serama eggs

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Serama chick

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Serama hen

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Serama rooster

To learn more about this breed and their owners' and breeders' experiences with them, see our breed discussion here: https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/chicken-breed-focus-serama.1110870/

Latest reviews

Great Ornamental Breed
Pros: Pretty nice
Very good looking
Bantams
Cons: Small eggs
Low egg production
Not very weather resistant
I love Seramas, they're very good for ornamental purposes!
Not great for eggs, but let's be honest, who's getting Seramas for eggs anyways?
Lots of pretty colors as well, and can be sweet when trained.
Great review of Seramas, good job!
Pros: Go broody often
Make great mothers
Lay rather frequently
Very beautiful
Don’t take up as much space as an LF
Tend to hatch early
Quieter crows
Cons: More fragile to cold
More fragile to heat
Expensive
More frequent crows
They can’t be AMAZING birds, and don’t get me wrong, they are my favorite. They aren’t very what or cold tolerant and they are rather expensive (for a reason, of course). Thing is, they are great birds, and I have never had a problem in all my time raising them. They grow up with LF chicks sometimes, and they do extremely well!
Purchase Price
$14 each
Purchase Date
Like 7 months ago
Pros: Lovely, tame, valuable, handsome birds.
One of mine lays daily with large eggs compared to her body size.
Cons: Get very cold, snacks for hawks, can be delicate.
I really love them!

People say they are rubbish layers, and they aren't the VERY best, but some can be really good.
I love true bantams but these are especially endearing.

For those who want to keep them indoors, well they can't be toilet trained, but the roos aren't that loud and many, including mine, just sound like squeaky toys.

Most can be very happy in trios or even pairs.
Don't try to keep them indoors totally though, because they do love outdoors.
Mogul Moonshine
Mogul Moonshine
100 percent agree
MageofMist
MageofMist
One of my gals lays massive eggs for her size, and I find them to be decent layers. The eggs do have a shorter shelf life though, compared to other eggs.

The roosters do sound like little squeaky toys and are quieter, though higher pitched. The birds are also smaller so you can keep more in a smaller space, though they still greatly enjoy bigger spaces.

Also if unable to provide them outside access due to an epidemic sweeping the area, provide vitamin D supplements as well as giving them things to do to prevent boredom and the hens plucking the shiny tails off your poor roosters, such as dustbaths, romain lettuce leaves, stuffed bellpeppers, paper balls full of treats and scatter feeding.

Comments

We received one. He's such a handsome lil thing! My son named him Phoenix. He crowed, more like squawked, yesterday for the first time. He is friendly and comical! I agree with your review! Sorry aboutyour girl.
 
I just got 11 of the little buggers. I have a lot of other large breed birds but these little ones just intrigue me. The ones I got are still in growing out stage as well as what I suspect are fully grown but less than a year old. Still teenagers I guess. I have 2 solid black ones, 1 paint, and various other colors. I think I will breed the blacks to the paint and see what pops out. Nice review and glad I spotted it on the page I was on.
 
Mine enjoyed eating with my kittens. Had another one with different coloring, Both gone now. Miss them.!!!
 
I completely missed this, sorry about that! In my experience they get along with anything I put them with, big or small. The hens can be tiny social bulldozers and seem to keep pretty high up on the pecking order, but they aren't vicious or antisocial. They're very much individuals though! Using the same caution with combining any other chickens together would suit you just fine :)
 
What a colorful breed...thanks for bringing it to my attention. It's small...not a bantam is it! What do hens usually weigh? I'll have to look into this breed.
 
I hatched one from some tester eggs a few years ago. It is still the only house bird I've ever had! They are great birds I wish I still had a few but I can't find any locally.
 
I have been doing some research as I am interested in breeding these for my 5 year old. She LOVES the babies, but as we all know they grow up way to fast. She gravitates toward the runts. She holds, plays with, brings in the house to watch tv and cuddle all of her babies at different times but still prefers the little ones. I thought these might be ideal because they would stay little. (We do have different bantam and standard breeds).
The lethal gene your breeder is referring to is for short legs.
What I have found is that if you breed a short let and long leg serama together 1/4 th will die in the shell from the lethal gene, 1/4 th will have carry the short leg gene and 1/2 will be long leg.
The lethal gene would not be what is causing already born chicks to die from the defect...
 
Stop killing the breed.
Stop creating silly standards for the accepted colors.
Seramas don't breed true in color.
There is no need to breed true in color.
Size, temperament, body shape make the serama.
 

Item information

Category
Chicken Breeds
Added by
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