It inhabits
steppe to
taiga and mountain valleys near
freshwater, grazing on plants such as
sedges (Cyperaceae),
grasses (Poaceae) and
water plants, and rarely swimming. It forms small flocks outside the breeding season. In the winter, it grazes on plains and stubble fields, sometimes far from water. Birds return from the winter quarters around April, and the breeding season starts soon thereafter. It breeds as single pairs or loose groups near marshes and other
wetlands, with nesting activity starting about May. The
clutch is usually 5–6 but sometimes up to 8
eggs, which are laid in a shallow nest made from plants, placed directly on the ground, often on a small
knoll to keep it dry. The
precocial young hatch after about 28 days and become sexually mature at 2–3 years of age. Around late August/early September, the birds leave for winter quarters, where they gather in small groups to
moult their worn plumage. The swan goose was uplisted from
Near Threatened to
Vulnerable on the
IUCN Red List in 1992 and further to
Endangered in 2000, as its population is declining due to habitat loss and excessive hunting and (particularly on the
Sanjiang Plain in China) egg collecting. But new research has shown it to be not as rare as it was believed, and consequently, it was downlisted to Vulnerable status again in 2008. Still, less than 500 pairs might remain in Russia, while in Mongolia numbers are unknown, though about 1,000 were seen at
Ögii Lake in 1977. Important wintering locations in China are
Lake Dongting,
Lake Poyang, the
Yancheng Coastal Wetlands and other locations around the lower
Yangtze River, where some 60,000 individuals may be found each year – though this may be almost the entire world population. Until the 1950s, the species wintered in small numbers (up to about 100 birds annually) in Japan, but
habitat destruction has driven them away. ==Domestication==