The
genus Anser was introduced by the French zoologist
Mathurin Jacques Brisson in 1760. The name comes from the Latin word
anser meaning "goose" used as the
specific epithet for the
greylag goose (
Anas anser) introduced by
Linnaeus in 1758, that epithet was
repeated to become its generic name as the
type species.
Phylogeny The evolutionary relationships between
Anser geese have been difficult to resolve because of their rapid
radiation during the
Pleistocene and frequent
hybridisation. In 2016 Ottenburghs and colleagues published a study that established the phylogenetic relationships between the species by comparing
exonic DNA sequences; }}
Species The genus contains 11 species: Some authorities also treat some
subspecies as potential future species splits, notably the Greenland white-fronted goose
A. albifrons flavirostris. • †
Anser atavus Fraas 1870 (Middle/Late Miocene of Bavaria, Germany) – sometimes in
Cygnus • †
Anser arenosus Bickart 1990 (Late Miocene of Arizona, USA) • †
Anser arizonae Bickart 1990 (Late Miocene of Arizona, USA) • †
Anser cygniformis Fraas 1870 (Late Miocene of Steinheim, Germany) • †
Anser oeningensis (Meyer 1865) Milne-Edwards 1867b [
Anas oeningensis Meyer 1865] (Late Miocene of Oehningen, Switzerland) • †
Anser thraciensis Burchak-Abramovich & Nikolov 1984 (Late Miocene/Early Pliocene of Trojanovo, Bulgaria) • †
Anser pratensis (Short 1970) [
Heterochen pratensis Short 1970] (Early Pliocene of Nebraska, USA) • †
Anser pressus (Brodkorb 1964) [
Chen pressa Brodkorb 1964] (Dwarf Snow goose) (Late Pliocene of Idaho, USA) • †
Anser thompsoni Martin & Mengel 1980 (Pliocene of Nebraska, USA) • †
Anser azerbaidzhanicus Serebrovsky 1940 (Early? Pleistocene of Binagady, Azerbaijan) • †
Anser devjatkini Kuročkin 1971 (Pliocene of Mongolia) • †
Anser eldaricus Burchak-Abramovich & Gadzyev 1978 (Miocene of
Georgia) • †
Anser tchikoicus Kuročkin 1985 (Pliocene of central Asia) • †
Anser djuktaiensis Zelenkov & Kurochkin 2014 (Late Pleistocene of Yakutia, Russia) • †
Anser subanser Janossy 1982 (Pleistocene of Europe) The
Maltese swan
Cygnus equitum was occasionally placed into
Anser, and
Anser condoni is a synonym of
Cygnus paloregonus. ==Relationship with humans and conservation status==