Pied Lovebirds

The first chick I ever hatched was a pied. His mother was a lutino and his father was a normal green. Knowing nothing of lovebird mutations, I assumed that if you crossed a green bird with a yellow one you got a green and yellow one! As it turns out, his mother was actually a pied lutino, but it didn't show up very well to the untrained eye.

Below is whiteface pied. I just love his coloring!

 

Lovebirds can vary greatly in their degree of "piedness." Some are so heavily pied that they are almost entirely yellow. Others may be so lightly pied that it is hard to detect. Sometimes only a single feather or a single white toenail will be the only evidence of the pied factor.

Here are three different pied birds. The one on the left is an immature (young) green pied. You can see the beginning of a red bib on him. The bird to his right is a seagreen violet pied. It has a single Whiteface factor. It is a lightly pied bird - evidenced in it's small amount of yellow on the mask and a few white flight feathers. The bird behind and to the right of her (in the background) is a heavily pied blue. It has a lot more yellow. (And you can see the difference in the bib colors. The seagreen pied has a much whiter bib than the blue pied.

 

And below is a very heavily pied bird.

 

And I just had to include this one, because I like the shot.

All those colors!!!

 

 

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