Geese or Anserinae (Scientific Name: Anserinae) are a family of birds belonging to the duck family of the order Anseriformes. There are wild geese and domesticated geese, which are raised commercially for their meat, liver, and feathers. There are many famous types of geese, including the Toulouse goose and the Iraqi goose, known as (Tam). It is large with a long neck, has a horn-like sound, is white with an orange beak, and the Egyptian goose, which is characterized by its small size, with the male weighing about 4 kg and being gray or white. It originated in Egypt and spread throughout the world. The Iraqi goose (Tam) is raised in ponds, and the wild goose migrates across the world and visits the Nile Delta in winter. It is known throughout the world and many legends revolve around it. The birds were domesticated (2500 BC), and geese were domesticated in Egypt about 3800 BC, and poultry were not domesticated in the West until about 800 years ago.