Zebra Finch Breeding
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- Hatchling
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Zebra Finch Breeding
Hey,
I got two zebra finches on Monday from the local petstore. I have them set up in a 30"x18"x18" flight cage. I am hoping to get the birds to nest and produce a clutch of eggs.
They seem alright, however, I have noticed that the female is 125% the size of the male. She also seems to "wag" her tail or twitch will regular frequency, much more so than the male. Is there anything that would be harmed by the female being larger (and possibly older) than the male.
Any advice will help. I have only had the birds for a few days and would have no problem returning the female and exchanging for a younger one. I am very new at this.
Regards,
Erik
I got two zebra finches on Monday from the local petstore. I have them set up in a 30"x18"x18" flight cage. I am hoping to get the birds to nest and produce a clutch of eggs.
They seem alright, however, I have noticed that the female is 125% the size of the male. She also seems to "wag" her tail or twitch will regular frequency, much more so than the male. Is there anything that would be harmed by the female being larger (and possibly older) than the male.
Any advice will help. I have only had the birds for a few days and would have no problem returning the female and exchanging for a younger one. I am very new at this.
Regards,
Erik
Last edited by ErikL on Tue May 08, 2007 9:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Thalia
- Amateur Architect
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As long as both birds are mature you should be ok, do either of them still have black on their beaks? Zebra females will wag their tails to signal to the male that they're ready to mate, so she might be trying to intice him. Don't worry zebras are generally more than willing to mate and produce chicks, lots and lots of noisy chicks
If you're trying to get them to reproduce make sure you're giving them lots of protein and calcium, I like feeding a mashed boiled egg, shell and all 


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- Hatchling
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Thanks.Thalia wrote:As long as both birds are mature you should be ok, do either of them still have black on their beaks? Zebra females will wag their tails to signal to the male that they're ready to mate, so she might be trying to intice him. Don't worry zebras are generally more than willing to mate and produce chicks, lots and lots of noisy chicksIf you're trying to get them to reproduce make sure you're giving them lots of protein and calcium, I like feeding a mashed boiled egg, shell and all
I am still not satisfied with the size difference. They appear to be getting along but it looks like an odd coupling.
I can return the large female and get a smaller one, but my girlfriend wants a white one. Not sure if that would work.
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- Hatchling
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They seem to be getting along well. I will leave the present female in there.
So far I have observed:
The two sleep on the same perch right next to each other.
When I added a basket-style nest near the perch, the two began to sleep in there as well.
Both are becoming more 'chirpy'.
- The female had been the only one of the two to make noises, she had been making soft 'beep' noises.
- Now the male is trying his hand at being a vocalist.
One funny observation is that when I go downstairs in the morning (the birds are upstairs), I hear them get very vocal, almost like they are arguing. I went up to check and they weren't fighting, just chirping at each other.
I will add more when I see it.
Thanks all for your advice.
-Erik
So far I have observed:
The two sleep on the same perch right next to each other.
When I added a basket-style nest near the perch, the two began to sleep in there as well.
Both are becoming more 'chirpy'.
- The female had been the only one of the two to make noises, she had been making soft 'beep' noises.
- Now the male is trying his hand at being a vocalist.
One funny observation is that when I go downstairs in the morning (the birds are upstairs), I hear them get very vocal, almost like they are arguing. I went up to check and they weren't fighting, just chirping at each other.
I will add more when I see it.
Thanks all for your advice.
-Erik
- StevePax
- Flirty Bird
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It's too bad we can't translate what they are saying, huh?
"Walter, you need to get going on that nest. It isn't going to build itself, you know!"
"Stop nagging me, Mabel. I told you I'd do it and I'll get to it, but right now the game is on."
"I swear, Walter, nothing would ever get done around here if it weren't for you. I'm probably going to have to sit on these eggs the whole time."
"Walter, you need to get going on that nest. It isn't going to build itself, you know!"
"Stop nagging me, Mabel. I told you I'd do it and I'll get to it, but right now the game is on."
"I swear, Walter, nothing would ever get done around here if it weren't for you. I'm probably going to have to sit on these eggs the whole time."
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HahaStevePax wrote:It's too bad we can't translate what they are saying, huh?
"Walter, you need to get going on that nest. It isn't going to build itself, you know!"
"Stop nagging me, Mabel. I told you I'd do it and I'll get to it, but right now the game is on."
"I swear, Walter, nothing would ever get done around here if it weren't for you. I'm probably going to have to sit on these eggs the whole time."
There is one notable observation that I did not include. Here it is:
When I checked the nest this morning it looked like one of the two (I don't know what the term for it is so here goes) placed a large dropping in the nest. When I returned later it was not there anymore. Will they clean out their droppings out of their nest of did it just soak in?
- tammieb
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- kenny
- Weaning
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- Location: East Yorkshire,England
hi erik
there is no difference in the british zebras..its just that some are bred for their colour and some are bred for their size..the show birds are enormous in size as oppossed to the normal "pet " zebras but if the breeders want a particular colour they breed the big ones to the samll ones as there is no other option open to them.so dont worry about the difference in size you will end up with medium sized ones!and the poop is passed in little transparent packages by most birds but when it hits the floor of the cage that membrane is broken hence the splat!
but when they are layed in the nest they fall on soft material so they can be carried away by the parents which is a delicate operation...the reason they do this stems from the wild..they carry the poop away from the nest so predators will not know where the nest is!
ken
there is no difference in the british zebras..its just that some are bred for their colour and some are bred for their size..the show birds are enormous in size as oppossed to the normal "pet " zebras but if the breeders want a particular colour they breed the big ones to the samll ones as there is no other option open to them.so dont worry about the difference in size you will end up with medium sized ones!and the poop is passed in little transparent packages by most birds but when it hits the floor of the cage that membrane is broken hence the splat!

ken
you can always tell a yorkshireman,but you cant tell him much