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Featured Replies

Posted

Now I have a book that speaks of, and shows pictures of a Lime budgerigar (a special mutation)

Has anyone ever heard of or seen any of these???

They talk about a bird in there who was split ino, he produced some ino offsprings who had a brown suffision on their rump...

In the book they show pictures of this bird and the mutation... ( I can scan these and upload them for you all to see)

I have an ino cock who has brown suffision on his rump and since this is a book done by Western Australians was wondering if this bird could be in the same genetic line...

Interesting libby! I have never heard of a lime budgie.

A picture would be good :ph34r:

  • Author

Copying the book now :ph34r:

they're rather odd looking strangly enough...

  • Author

This is the two pages of the book where the mutation is mentioned... you can't see the birds rump very well, but I am uploading photo's of my boys rump and wings currently also...

The book is called Buderigars: all you need to know

By Michael S Christian, fisrt published 1983 the birds were apparently bred in 1979 though by the west coast budgie club.

 

http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/1libby/lime1.jpg

http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/1libby/lime2.jpg

 

(pictures are too big so need to be links)

i have the same book but it is an newer edition and doesn't have it

WOW !!

Thanks *libby*

Cool looking, there must be a lot of different mutations that have come and gone.

But not many that have been photographed like these.

i have the same book but it is an newer edition and doesn't have it

 

Same here. I have the newer version 1996. No photos and no mention in the text of lime budgerigars. This would perhaps indicate that the mutaion didnt materialise into anything.

  • Author
  • Author

I've also read the newer copy.

I thought so too Derek... I've noticed his rump since day one (easier to see with the naked eye) but never thought anything of it until I saw this book... I presumed it was some kind of suffision...

I have an albino like that too, with the light brown on the rump..... :wub:

I am far from even being educated in the budgie world but those first pics from the book remind me of the fallows that a breeder I know has. I have a baby lacewing that has those wing markings like your bird.

 

100_0578.jpg

100_0583.jpg

Edited by sueannleach

I’m always looking out for something different with Budgies, when you get some thing like that I think it’s very interesting to see if you can work with it [breeding] to concentrate & bring it out more, maybe it’s a new mutation which would be very interesting I would think. No I have never heard of a Lime Budgie.

years ago i breed a creamino that left the box as a yf2 albino and when it moulted into his adult feathers it changed to a limey green colour. unfortunatly it died 6 months later and i never got photos of him or bred from him

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