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  2. Cockatiel colour genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockatiel_colour_genetics

    With the availability of the Whiteface mutation, the cockatiel's wide colour varieties are divided into 2 main classes (or series): Yellow base: with psittacofulvin (yellow and orange) pigments. White base: without psittacofulvin pigments; Some white-faced cockatiels have entirely white bodies and red eyes.

  3. Cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockatiel

    Adult cockatiels with common coloring (grey body with yellow head) are sexually dimorphic, though to a lesser degree than many other avian species. This is only evident after the first moulting, typically occurring about six to nine months after hatching: the male loses the white or yellow barring and spots on the underside of his tail feathers ...

  4. Bronze fallow cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze_Fallow_Cockatiel

    When a bronze fallow cockatiel is born, it has a pale pink eye. As they mature ,the eye color slightly darkens, a bronze fallow cockatiel's eyes are lighter than a Lutino cockatiel, whose red eye is darker. A yellow wash may emerge across the body. [2] One feature is unlike other mutations. Male bronze fallow cockatiels differ from females.

  5. Lutino cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutino_cockatiel

    All cockatiel colour genetic mutations have the same calls. The male lutino cockatiels can talk, sing, and dance (shakes head, makes the wings heart-shaped, etc.) to attract female cockatiels. Lutino cockatiels appear as full body in color yellow with two orange circular spots around the ear and cheek area.

  6. Woman Gets the Rudest Wake up Call From Her Cockatiel ... - AOL

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  7. 127 cockatiels, parrots and more saved from Florida home ...

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  8. Cockatoo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockatoo

    The cockatiel is by far the cockatoo species most frequently kept in captivity. Among U.S. bird keepers that participated in a survey by APPMA in 2003/04, 39% had cockatiels, as opposed to only 3% that had (other) cockatoo species. [116] The white cockatoos are more often encountered in aviculture than the black cockatoos. [117]

  9. White-faced cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-faced_cockatiel

    The "albino cockatiel" is not a true albino, it is a combination of a "white-faced cockatiel" and a "Lutino cockatiel". The "Whiteface gene" removes all the yellow and orange that would be present in a Lutino. and the "Lutino gene" removes all the black and grey. The result is an all white cockatiel with red eyes. [4]