White in gouldian head colour..

Need some general finch keeping help? Ask your questions here.
Jamley

I have had white breasted and purple breasted gouldians colour up this season and where the black is under their beak there is patches of white. One black headed white breast female is all white under her beak and black from the beak up. does any one know where this comes from. Is it a split to yellow?
User avatar
Craig52
...............................
...............................
Posts: 5079
Joined: 11 Nov 2011, 19:26
Location: victoria

Yes,they are split to Australian yellow. Craig
Jamley

IMG_2299.JPG
Thanks Craig. Any suggestion what i am best to cross it with. would like to explore other colours i have a pastel YH PB male. Thinking about him or maybe buying a yellow male.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
User avatar
Craig52
...............................
...............................
Posts: 5079
Joined: 11 Nov 2011, 19:26
Location: victoria

Jamley wrote:
IMG_2299.JPG
Thanks Craig. Any suggestion what i am best to cross it with. would like to explore other colours i have a pastel YH PB male. Thinking about him or maybe buying a yellow male.
She is one of the better marked i have seen,nice bird.I think you better read up on gouldian mutations as not all yellow gouldian mutations are the same mutation.
You are better off trying to source an Australian yellow back cock bird to put with her from a AYB breeder. Cheers Craig
Jamley

Thanks Craig very helpful.
User avatar
finchbreeder
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Posts: 11629
Joined: 27 Jun 2009, 20:00
Location: Midwest of West. Aust. Coast
Location: Midwest of West.Aust.Coast

Are the two birds with the white spots both female? Are the two birds with white spots siblings?
LML
LML
Jamley

IMG_2185 - Version 2.JPG
We have actually had 3. In my husbands aviary he had a RH PB male colour up with a small patch of white under his beak like a goatee. The next season in a separate aviary I had 2 WB 1 YH male (pictured) and 1 BH female (pictured in previous post) .Those 2 could be related but the purple breasted is not related. So we didn't know what was going on , we have never had this happen before.
Jamley

IMG_2161.JPG
IMG_2185 - Version 2.JPG
We have had 3 all up now. Last season my husband got a RH PB male in his aviary colour up with a small bit of white under his beak. This season in my aviary i got 2 WB 1 was a YH male and 1 was a BH female. they could be related back a little but the PB male is not related. Previous to this we had never seen this before.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
User avatar
Craig52
...............................
...............................
Posts: 5079
Joined: 11 Nov 2011, 19:26
Location: victoria

Jamley wrote:
IMG_2161.JPG
IMG_2185 - Version 2.JPG
We have had 3 all up now. Last season my husband got a RH PB male in his aviary colour up with a small bit of white under his beak. This season in my aviary i got 2 WB 1 was a YH male and 1 was a BH female. they could be related back a little but the PB male is not related. Previous to this we had never seen this before.
I read FB is on to something in her post,you can pr up the RH PB male to the BH female to produce some stunning white headed Australian Yellow backs.You will need to pr these birds up on their own though.Keep us posted. Cheers Craig :thumbup:
User avatar
Tiaris
...............................
...............................
Posts: 3517
Joined: 23 Apr 2011, 08:48
Location: Coffs Harbour

I'd be pairing her to the YH cock rather than the RH one as the hen has a yellow-bill & so is also YH (under the black). This pairing should give half BH & half YH progeny in both sexes if the YH cock is split to BH. If he is pure YH they would produce all YH with the young males being split BH & the hens all just YH.
If you use the RH cock there are 4 possibilities which his head colour genotype could be & most of these would produce a complete mishmash of young many of whom with unknown head colour genotypes.
Post Reply

Return to “Finch Discussion & Questions”