Whydah Always in Breeding Plumage?
Posted: Sat Apr 02, 2011 8:00 am
I've had a pair of Pin-tailed Whydahs for a few years now. When I got them, they were both very young (at least the male), as he was in juvenile plumage and was just starting to turn black and white. I've had both my Whydahs, a male and female, for about two years now.
I knew male Whydahs looked different in the breeding season, turning from the color of the hen to a black and white color and developing a very long tail. My male is just beautiful when he looks like this..... however, he always looks like this.
My understanding is that when it is not breeding season, the male Whydah is supposed to go back to being the color of the hen. My male is always black and white and never goes back to the hen colors in my two years or so of having him. He does loose his long tail feathers, but within a few months he gets new ones in to replace them. In the meantime, he's staying the black and white color.
I don't know what's causing him to always stay in "breeding colors". I thought maybe it was the food/water I'm supplying them, or the geographical area of which he's living, or that maybe he has a medical condition of having too much testosterone or something that is keeping him in breeding colors instead of him changing back to normal colors? I don't know.
Its not a major concern of mine, as I don't think its anything threatening, but from what I've read I don't think its normal.
I knew male Whydahs looked different in the breeding season, turning from the color of the hen to a black and white color and developing a very long tail. My male is just beautiful when he looks like this..... however, he always looks like this.
My understanding is that when it is not breeding season, the male Whydah is supposed to go back to being the color of the hen. My male is always black and white and never goes back to the hen colors in my two years or so of having him. He does loose his long tail feathers, but within a few months he gets new ones in to replace them. In the meantime, he's staying the black and white color.
I don't know what's causing him to always stay in "breeding colors". I thought maybe it was the food/water I'm supplying them, or the geographical area of which he's living, or that maybe he has a medical condition of having too much testosterone or something that is keeping him in breeding colors instead of him changing back to normal colors? I don't know.
Its not a major concern of mine, as I don't think its anything threatening, but from what I've read I don't think its normal.