White Headed Munia - boy or girl?
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- Pip
- Posts: 11
- Joined: Tue Sep 18, 2007 4:09 am
White Headed Munia - boy or girl?
Can anyone here decifer the difference in sex in my White Headed Munias?
http://s192.photobucket.com/albums/z265 ... fguygu.jpg
http://s192.photobucket.com/albums/z265 ... nt=rgr.jpg
http://s192.photobucket.com/albums/z265 ... htrbne.jpg
If you need me to take a pic of a specific part of the bird, i can do so.
Ive been told that you can tell by under the beak. The male is more oval curve and the hen is more sharp, than curved.
http://s192.photobucket.com/albums/z265 ... fguygu.jpg
http://s192.photobucket.com/albums/z265 ... nt=rgr.jpg
http://s192.photobucket.com/albums/z265 ... htrbne.jpg
If you need me to take a pic of a specific part of the bird, i can do so.
Ive been told that you can tell by under the beak. The male is more oval curve and the hen is more sharp, than curved.
- kenny
- Weaning
- Posts: 1778
- Joined: Sat Jul 15, 2006 3:45 pm
- Location: East Yorkshire,England
hi john
going by the appearance of the 2 together the one on the right seems to me to be the male of the species!all though i am not certain but the beaks are very much like java sparrows and thats the way i sex mine the one with the largest beak is usually the male when the species are exactly alike
ken
going by the appearance of the 2 together the one on the right seems to me to be the male of the species!all though i am not certain but the beaks are very much like java sparrows and thats the way i sex mine the one with the largest beak is usually the male when the species are exactly alike
ken
you can always tell a yorkshireman,but you cant tell him much
- tursiopschic
- Mature
- Posts: 122
- Joined: Tue Jun 06, 2006 11:28 am
- Location: San Diego
I'm not sure...as Kenny said, the one on the right has a bit larger beak so it's probably a male. The one on the left still could be a boy.
I would watch and listen for songs and male behavior. With my munias if one of the males sings, the other one will hop right next close to him, lean in, and cock his head as if to listen to the other sing. Then after the song is done they beak fence a bit.
I would watch and listen for songs and male behavior. With my munias if one of the males sings, the other one will hop right next close to him, lean in, and cock his head as if to listen to the other sing. Then after the song is done they beak fence a bit.
~olivia
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- Pip
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Thanks for your replies.....
Kenny, I agree, the one on the right does look like he has a bigger beak. He is alos the one with the more rounded underside of the beak which also tells me he's a male.
Tursiopchic, I dont hear any songs at all....just constant chirping. They are very strange finches....lol. They dont like perches very much and love flying to the side of the cage and hanging of it. The jump to the same three spots....all day.
How do these guys go with breeding? Ive heard that they should be paired as juveniles or they might not bond as a mating pair as adults? Do you think they will breed as a single pair in a cage?
Kenny, I agree, the one on the right does look like he has a bigger beak. He is alos the one with the more rounded underside of the beak which also tells me he's a male.
Tursiopchic, I dont hear any songs at all....just constant chirping. They are very strange finches....lol. They dont like perches very much and love flying to the side of the cage and hanging of it. The jump to the same three spots....all day.
How do these guys go with breeding? Ive heard that they should be paired as juveniles or they might not bond as a mating pair as adults? Do you think they will breed as a single pair in a cage?
- kenny
- Weaning
- Posts: 1778
- Joined: Sat Jul 15, 2006 3:45 pm
- Location: East Yorkshire,England
hi john
they are munias so breed the same as society finches...there is a potential problem with these birds though as you say they tend to hang on the side of the cage and thier claws grow at an alarming speed and end up sickle shaped ,if i where you i would try to trim them a little as one day you may go in and find one deceased due to being fast on the cage wire
ken
they are munias so breed the same as society finches...there is a potential problem with these birds though as you say they tend to hang on the side of the cage and thier claws grow at an alarming speed and end up sickle shaped ,if i where you i would try to trim them a little as one day you may go in and find one deceased due to being fast on the cage wire
ken
you can always tell a yorkshireman,but you cant tell him much
- tursiopschic
- Mature
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- Joined: Tue Jun 06, 2006 11:28 am
- Location: San Diego
I haven't had experience breeding them, but know a person who has w/o them being bonded in juvenile feathers.
My white-headed nun likes to hang off the side of the cage too...it is very strange. I think he is the flightiest of my birds and definitely has some level of OCD
and flies to the same spots too.
Let us know how it goes!
My white-headed nun likes to hang off the side of the cage too...it is very strange. I think he is the flightiest of my birds and definitely has some level of OCD

Let us know how it goes!
~olivia
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- Pip
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Tursi mine are exactly the same.....lol....they are just going mental....they look happy as though just bouncing up and down even if its on the same spot....ive never seen such hyperactivity and constant chirping in a bird.
It goes to show how different the personalities are of all the breeds.
Hilary...i reckon you got lucky....lol.
Im looking for a male as i think i may have two females. We will see if i can find one cause they are very hard to get in Brisbane. Anyone around Brissy got one they want to sell or swap?
It goes to show how different the personalities are of all the breeds.
Hilary...i reckon you got lucky....lol.
Im looking for a male as i think i may have two females. We will see if i can find one cause they are very hard to get in Brisbane. Anyone around Brissy got one they want to sell or swap?
-
- Pip
- Posts: 11
- Joined: Tue Sep 18, 2007 4:09 am
Tursi mine are exactly the same.....lol....they are just going mental....they look happy as though just bouncing up and down even if its on the same spot....ive never seen such hyperactivity and constant chirping in a bird.
It goes to show how different the personalities are of all the breeds.
Hilary...i reckon you got lucky....lol.
Im looking for a male as i think i may have two females. We will see if i can find one cause they are very hard to get in Brisbane. Anyone around Brissy got one they want to sell or swap?
It goes to show how different the personalities are of all the breeds.
Hilary...i reckon you got lucky....lol.
Im looking for a male as i think i may have two females. We will see if i can find one cause they are very hard to get in Brisbane. Anyone around Brissy got one they want to sell or swap?
- kenny
- Weaning
- Posts: 1778
- Joined: Sat Jul 15, 2006 3:45 pm
- Location: East Yorkshire,England
hi john
the bouncing up and down has struck a chord with me ,most munias are related to each other and a lot of the males do this hopping kind of thing when they are trying to impress a female you dont think that you could have a male!and not know as a lot of thier singing voices are barely audible my hecks is definately a male but it is very hard to hear is mating song as he hops around the females
ken
the bouncing up and down has struck a chord with me ,most munias are related to each other and a lot of the males do this hopping kind of thing when they are trying to impress a female you dont think that you could have a male!and not know as a lot of thier singing voices are barely audible my hecks is definately a male but it is very hard to hear is mating song as he hops around the females
ken
you can always tell a yorkshireman,but you cant tell him much