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  2. Indigo bunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigo_bunting

    The immature bird resembles the female in coloring, although a male may have hints of blue on the tail and shoulders and have darker streaks on the underside. The beak is short and conical. In the adult female, the beak is light brown tinged with blue, and in the adult male the upper half is brownish-black while the lower is light blue. [12]

  3. Northern cardinal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_cardinal

    Young birds, both male and female, show coloring similar to the adult female until the fall, when they molt and grow adult feathers. [13] They are brown above and red-brown below, with brick-colored crest, forehead, wings, and tail. [5] The legs and feet are a dark pink-brown. The iris of the eye is brown. [5]

  4. Mourning dove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mourning_dove

    The crown of the adult male is a distinctly bluish-grey color. Females are similar in appearance but with more brown coloring overall and a little smaller than the male. The iridescent feather patches on the neck above the shoulders are nearly absent but can be quite vivid on males. Juvenile birds have a scaly appearance and are generally ...

  5. Rivoli's hummingbird - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rivoli's_hummingbird

    The adult male is green-bronze dorsally, becoming more bronzed on the black-tipped tail. The crown is violet, the throat gorget bright blue-green, and the rest of the head black apart from a white spot behind the eye. The chest is green-bronze and the belly grayish. The female is bronze-green dorsally and has a dull gray ventral coloring.

  6. Cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockatiel

    The pied mutation first appeared in California in 1949. This mutation is a blotch of colour on an otherwise solid-coloured bird. For example, this may appear as a grey blotch on a yellow cockatiel. Lutino colouration was first seen in 1958. These birds lack the grey of their wild counterparts and are white to soft yellow.

  7. Gouldian finch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gouldian_finch

    The Gouldian finch was described by British ornithologist John Gould in 1844 as Amadina gouldiae, [3] in honour of his deceased wife Elizabeth. [4] [5] Specimens of the bird were sent to him by British naturalist Benjamin Bynoe, although they had been described some years before by French naturalists Jacques Bernard Hombron and Honoré Jacquinot. [6]