Interesting video about Gouldians
- pattiej
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Interesting video about Gouldians
Here is a link to the video Gouldian Video
I never knew about matching head colors when choosing a mate for my Gouldian, I thought it was ok to mix them up... I don't even know what head color my female would be considered anyway??? It's not Black, Red or Orange, It's like a cream or Ivory color!!
I never knew about matching head colors when choosing a mate for my Gouldian, I thought it was ok to mix them up... I don't even know what head color my female would be considered anyway??? It's not Black, Red or Orange, It's like a cream or Ivory color!!
~Pattie~
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Re: Interesting video about Gouldians
Very interesting! Thanks for posting this.
Out-numbered 13:4 by Zebras.
- L in Ontario
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Re: Interesting video about Gouldians
Is it a yellow back Gouldian? Then it would have a genetically black head that appears cream or ivory coloured.pattiej wrote:Here is a link to the video Gouldian Video
I never knew about matching head colors when choosing a mate for my Gouldian, I thought it was ok to mix them up... I don't even know what head color my female would be considered anyway??? It's not Black, Red or Orange, It's like a cream or Ivory color!!
Liz
- pattiej
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Re: Interesting video about Gouldians
Yes! She is a yellow back! Thank you! I did not know that!! LOL! I would have guessed red or orange.... Boy this just gets more and more confusing to me. lol... I guess I just don't understand genetics! Whenever anyone tries explaining it to me I just get sleepy lol!L in Ontario wrote:Is it a yellow back Gouldian? Then it would have a genetically black head that appears cream or ivory coloured.pattiej wrote:Here is a link to the video Gouldian Video
I never knew about matching head colors when choosing a mate for my Gouldian, I thought it was ok to mix them up... I don't even know what head color my female would be considered anyway??? It's not Black, Red or Orange, It's like a cream or Ivory color!!
~Pattie~
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Re: Interesting video about Gouldians
Er, any truth in this? I only just got into breeding gouldians and I pair them up with different colour heads. One pair is breeding so far, they laid 6 eggs, 1-2 hatched and they chucked the rest. They've since laid another 6 eggs and are incubating.
Re-arranging all my pairs to match head colours just because of a video seems a bit off.
Re-arranging all my pairs to match head colours just because of a video seems a bit off.
Gouldians, Masked grass finches, Blue capped cordon bleus, Fawn Bichenos, Bengalese.
- lovemyfinch
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Re: Interesting video about Gouldians
My pair that just finished raising a clutch are male RH and female BH, they seem to love each other very much and are now raising 1 spoiled little prince.
Although it has been mentioned here before that it is not like she had any other choices. 


Janine
shaftails,gouldians,societies,green singers,owls,cubans, and 1 parrotlet
shaftails,gouldians,societies,green singers,owls,cubans, and 1 parrotlet

- L in Ontario
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Re: Interesting video about Gouldians
I 'think' the video is trying to say that a higher success rate of breeding would be amongst pairs with the same head colouring.
I mix my pairs up all the time, in order to get more variety in the offspring. Some clutches are 8 live chicks successfully raised to weaning, some clutches are never incubated. My average is somewhere around 5 - 6 live chicks fully weaned by their parents.
I mix my pairs up all the time, in order to get more variety in the offspring. Some clutches are 8 live chicks successfully raised to weaning, some clutches are never incubated. My average is somewhere around 5 - 6 live chicks fully weaned by their parents.
Liz
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Re: Interesting video about Gouldians
You have to remember that Dr. Pryke is working with hundreds of pairs, and her observations are reflected in large numbers of offspring from those pairs in her research facility. She is also only working with Red and Black head color morphs because Orange is so incredibly scarce in the wild, and she does not do research on the mutations.finchbob wrote:Er, any truth in this? I only just got into breeding gouldians and I pair them up with different colour heads. One pair is breeding so far, they laid 6 eggs, 1-2 hatched and they chucked the rest. They've since laid another 6 eggs and are incubating.
Re-arranging all my pairs to match head colours just because of a video seems a bit off.
Like anything else, statistics and scientific research require you to replicate a lot of things numerous times in order to quantify what you are seeing.
Just because in her research, she is seeing a pattern of biased sex ratios in offspring of mis-matched pairs, doesn't mean that you will necessarily see it if you mis-match yours.
One pairing will only produce three-four clutches..
Now talk about 100 pairs and the number of clutches they will produce - you have a LOT more to look at it.
It is similar to thinking about a coin toss.. the odds are "50/50" - but if you only flip it four times, you could very likely get heads every time.
Flip it 10,000 times, and you will have a more even 50/50 distribution of results.
I recently mis-matched a BH male to a RH female..
Technically this pairing should result in more males to females..
In the first clutch I had 5 out of 5 fertile eggs that all hatched - three are female, two are male

However, in past clutches of mis-matched head colors (BH male to RH hen), I got 8 males and two hens, and in yet another (OH male to RH hen), I didn't get a single hen.
Odd? A little..
Could it be coincidence? Yes..
Am I going to base my pairings on this research? Obviously not

There are many other factors to consider besides head color.. other research suggests that if a hen really likes her mate, she will bias the offspring to be males to put more males like her mate into the population.
Others say a hen in prime breeding condition will produce a higher ratio of male offspring.
Still others feel that lighting plays an important role because Goulds see in an additional dimension (UV) of color, so if the lighting is off, it could affect mate selection.
Not to mention there are a slew of other factors that go into mate selection (beak size, tail spire length, song and dance - and the males do have some preferences of their own).
Keep in mind many of us are not breeding in a large colony setting where the birds are allowed to select their own mate based on their preferences.
If we breed in individual cages with the pairs separated outside of breeding - we are selecting the pairs for them and giving them no other option. So we are acting on the birds and we are an additional variable in the equation.
Tossing doesn't reflect a head color preference, and in my experience it is usually the male that tosses, and since it is technically the females that have the higher preference on head colors, it seems unlikely that this behavior would be related.
I find tossing to be either a problem of inexperience, or an intrinsic behavioral problem that may never go away.