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Fire finches
Posted: 21 May 2010, 14:22
by Diane
Same kind of question as the parrot finch topic
Red fire finch x with pink fire finch
What is the outcome? Should the colours be kept separate?
Re: Fire finches
Posted: 21 May 2010, 16:03
by Jayburd
just as with the parrot finches, both the above birds are the same species. They'll (obviously) therefore breed.
I would imaging you'd get a combination of both colours, and splits.
Re: Fire finches
Posted: 22 May 2010, 13:22
by Pete Sara
Well here is my opinion , as I have had fires for a while and I had pink ones and normals . Before i moved to this house i had just normals and got rid of them to make room to move.To cut things short i finally got another pair but didn't realise the hen was pink. The male was a pure normal and wasn't split for anything as it was a offspring of my original pairs.So had a mixed pair ,there first two clutches all the males were pink and the hens normals. So i paired pink boys to pink girls and got all pinks
and got no splits from them ... pete
Re: Fire finches
Posted: 22 May 2010, 19:08
by toothlessjaws
is the pink mutation the same mutation that graham bull of
www.aussiefinchbreeder.com calls "cinnamon"?
Re: Fire finches
Posted: 22 May 2010, 20:26
by finchbreeder
From the breeding results you list Pete it would seem that pinks are sex linked. So Diane what ever pink you have you will get pinks of the opposite sex. Graham Bulls article lists the common types of Ruddies as normal, pink and cinnamon so pink and cinnamon are different mutations. Anyone got a pic or 3?
LML
Re: Fire finches
Posted: 24 May 2010, 18:41
by southy
Pink ruddies (fire finches) are recessive
Therefore if you put a pink either sex with a normal you will get splits (normal looking carrying pink genes)
Re: Fire finches
Posted: 24 May 2010, 20:30
by finchbreeder
????????????????? 2 answers that contradict each other. Don't you love genetics. I do so going to go trawling the net for info.
LML