Post
by hanabi » Thu Apr 26, 2018 9:57 pm
Hello
Sheather
What does a "morph" mean? Fawn should be autosomal inheritance (otherwise it would be called a Cinnamon = sex-linked inheritance). Does a "fawn morph" simply mean a less-dilute version of fawn?
Hi
isobea
To my knowledge there are no pintails anywhere in the US. You are very lucky.
Pintails are very difficult to obtain here in Japan too. I had to ask an importer, and it took two year before I obtained my two hens and a cock. I was told by someone here that Pintails are a little weird, and he was right. I never once heard a single sound from any of them; not even a peep. Not once did the cock sing or display. Nothing in over two years. And absolutely no breeding activity of any type. Perhaps my three were all old. In any case the cock died so now I have two hens that I need to find another cock or two for.
Chestnut Breasted Munias and Spice Finches were also hard to come by here until I badgered my importer. Now myself the a few of my "bird friends" have enough stock to provide a reasonable amount of genetic diversity that we plan to maintain. I'm still trying to obtain Black-Headed Munia and White-headed Munia, but no luck yet.
BTW, really nice photographs!
Thanks. Good photos take a huge amount of time, especially without top-quality (expensive!) equipment. I take 200 to 500 images per bird and then have to sort through them to select the best dozen or so ("best" = in-focus and good pose). I "make do" with the equipment I have so they are not the best of quality unfortunately, but good enough for me.
Cheers.
Ross at Lake Biwa, Japan
African Silverbill, Chestnut-Breasted Munia, Common Waxbill, Diamond Finch, Forbes Parrotfinch, Gold-Breasted Waxbill, Gouldian Finch, Masked Finch, Owl Finch, Painted Firetail Finch, Pintailed Parrotfinch, Plumhead Finch, Red-Billed Firefinch, Red-browed Firetail Finch, Scaly-Breasted Munia, Self Society Finch, Star Finch.