Pink fawn

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Jebtech95
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Posts: 46
Joined: 23 Aug 2021, 17:57
Location: Sydney
Location: Western sydney

Hey guys ive managed to breed myself a couple pink fawns unlike ive ever seen what arenyour thoughts? Are they hard to source in NSW?
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finchbreeder
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Location: Midwest of West.Aust.Coast

I believe there are a couple of people breeding the fawns. But unsure of location. Your one in the pic is lighter than anything I have seen pictured. Logically the parents must both be split, or it is sex linked and the mother is carrying the gene as it is obviously male. Any chance of another pic from a different angle? Are you positive the parents are not related?
LML
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Jebtech95
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Posts: 46
Joined: 23 Aug 2021, 17:57
Location: Sydney
Location: Western sydney

Ive bred the pink male with a split orange fawn and got 2 babies that look like the father and another 2 splits i will post photos of the pinks when they come out in a few weeks
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Jebtech95
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Posts: 46
Joined: 23 Aug 2021, 17:57
Location: Sydney
Location: Western sydney

Heres a few photos
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Jebtech95
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Posts: 46
Joined: 23 Aug 2021, 17:57
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finchbreeder wrote: 28 Dec 2021, 18:01 I believe there are a couple of people breeding the fawns. But unsure of location. Your one in the pic is lighter than anything I have seen pictured. Logically the parents must both be split, or it is sex linked and the mother is carrying the gene as it is obviously male. Any chance of another pic from a different angle? Are you positive the parents are not related?

Positive parents arent related i have a colony in the big aviary and i believe that pink came from a red fronted male that must of been a split to fawn which bred with a split to yellow fawn hen i then bread these guys with unrelated split hens and turns out im getting more pink! I plan on outcrossing the males to normal soon then breed back
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elferoz777
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Joined: 01 Feb 2012, 22:15
Location: Fairy Meadow, NSW

mine are pinkish also. it's how fawn goes and it's recessive not sex linked.

keep up the good work
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Jebtech95
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Posts: 46
Joined: 23 Aug 2021, 17:57
Location: Sydney
Location: Western sydney

elferoz777 wrote: 28 Dec 2021, 20:16 mine are pinkish also. it's how fawn goes and it's recessive not sex linked.

keep up the good work
Some beauties there mate😍
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finchbreeder
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You both have some beautiful birds there. Thanks for clarifying the inheritance Elf, I was not sure. So Jeb has been lucky enough to source a couple of splits. Good luck to you both in continuing to breed these little beauties.
LML
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Craig52
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The pinks are quite common now and there are some yellow fawns that are a very light sandy colour on the back. As these birds first appeared in my aviaries several years ago they are autosomal recessive. It was thought that breeding colour to colour has brought out the pink and light sandy coloured birds originally and they continued in split birds. Originally I only bred a colour to a split thinking it was a weak mutation like the blue gouldians. The mutation is very strong and colour to colour can be done but new blood does need to be introduced frequently to keep their stamina up. The bird is a dilute back mutation not fawn as they hold the black breast feathers on a fawn it would be brown.
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finchbreeder
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Location: Midwest of West. Aust. Coast
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dilute back mutation not fawn as they hold the black breast feathers
Nice to know that when I first saw them and though dilute - I was on the right track. :thumbup:
LML
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