T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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784.1 | 1st egg is out | JGO::DEGEN | | Wed Apr 07 1993 19:01 | 10 |
| re: 784.0 agaporinis / love-birds
The first egg is come out at 6 april, this is after the 22st day
after they start to brood.
I hope the rest of the eggs will come out soon.
Johan.
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784.2 | LOVEBIRDS | ABACUS::BOURGAULT | | Tue Apr 13 1993 12:13 | 21 |
| Johan,
What variety of Lovebird are you breeding? I find that they are very
prolific little breeders. I had a couple of Peachface normal pairs
that I had to remove the nest box or they would have continued to
reproduce forever!
Right now I have 2 Lutino Peachfaced hens that I am looking for mates
for. Once I locate them I will set them up for breeding.
I was taking care of a pair of green masked lovebirds for our club
recently and they had a clutch of chicks and reared their young
successfully, then went back to nest and one of them started to
eat their eggs. I thought it was due to a lack of protein and
increased the protein in their diet, also increased their
vitamin dosage. That didn't help, so I started feeding them
Ce'De eggfood, hoping that that would suffice, but to no avail.
they continued to eat each and every egg they produced! These
birds were on a very well balanced diet, fresh veggies daily
(corn, broccoli, spinach, carrots).
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784.3 | black head lovebirds | JGO::DEGEN | | Wed Apr 14 1993 03:55 | 39 |
| Hoi,
I'm breeding whit a couple of Blackhead Lovebirds or the latin name
Agapornis Personata.
At this moment they have 2 youngs, the 3th young died after several
hours coming out the egg, 1 egg must come out last monday but didn't
and the last one must come out today.
The 2 youngs growing well.
Yesterday I started to feed them CeDe egg feed, normaly I give them the
normal food, and every morning a litle piece of brown bread, and also
every days frech twigs cut in pieces, and dayly a frech bad so the
hen can take dayly a bad to keep te egg at the right dampness.
They are living in a cage standing on a 1.60 meter high case in the
kitchen, the cage is 70x40x70 centimeters and a breeding block of
25x20x20 centimeters an a hole in the left above corner of 4,5
centimetes.
The hen bild it completly full whit twigs and in the right under side
she bild the breeding room.
Its very beatiful to see how she do that, it look like this:
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|-()------- \ |
| / \|
| \ /|
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I think the problem off eating the eggs will comes that they maybe have
not enough lime.
May be you can solve it to hang a limestone/sepia (seashell) in the cage
or use special bird sand for under in the cage.
I hope this helps.
Johan.
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784.4 | update 784.2 | JGO::DEGEN | | Fri Apr 16 1993 02:48 | 7 |
| RE: 784.2
At this moment I've 2 young Blackhead Lovebirds / Agapornis Personatas
the 3th young died several hours after coming out.
The last 2 eggs where not fertilized.
Johan.
|
784.5 | Two different coloured Babies | JGO::DEGEN | | Tue May 04 1993 15:46 | 22 |
| Update 784.4
The two little Blackhead lovebirds are growing well.
Several days ago I saw that the little once have different colours.
The oldest one is a Blue mutation Blackhead lovebird and the youngest
one is coloured as in the wild (green,yellow,black).
When I bought the couple they were in a cage with Blue mutations.
The couple I bought where both coloured as in the wild.
A little difference between the Male and Female is that the Male has
a lighter colour head ( it looks more Brown as the Agapornis Nigeris)
as the Female (she had a normaly Blackhead).
So I believe that the Male is out a nest of Blue mutations Blackhead
Lovebirds.
Can anyone tell me more about this Pleace ?
Because this is the first time I'm breeding with this kind of
Lovebirds.
Thanks Johan.
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784.6 | Reply to Question on Blue Mutation Masked Lovebirds | VAXUUM::COMPTON | Linda DTN381-0687 ZKO1-2/C21 | Thu Jul 15 1993 13:24 | 16 |
| If both your parents are colored as in the wild and you got a blue
mutation, both parents are carrying the autosomal recessive gene for
blue...it takes both parents to make a visual blue mutation. Or...
when they were in the flight, if another male bird is actually the
father, he had to be "split to blue" as we say here to mean carrying
the recessive gene. The next time you breed your pair, you'll still
not know for sure, because if both your parents are indeed split to
blue, they will give you only 25% blue babies over time (either males
or females), 25% split to blue (either males or females, and you won't
know if they are true splits to blue until they are correctly mated
to test this), and the rest genotypically and phenotypically green
(carrying no recessive genes--pure "wild" color birds). Brantermann
and Lockerman have written a good book on lovebirds called "The World
of Lovebirds" -- if you want more details, such as the ISBN number if
that would help you order the book, pls. reply. The book costs about
$20 U.S. /Linda
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784.7 | The World of Lovebirds booki | RAGMOP::COMPTON | | Tue Aug 03 1993 14:24 | 14 |
| Earlier in this note I mentioned a book which one of the noters asked me
to give more information on:
The World of Lovebirds - Authors Jurgen Brockmann and Werner
Lantermann, translated from the German language by
William Charlton, publisher T.F.H. Publications, Inc.,
Copyright 1990, ISBN 0-86622-927-2, hardbound, 192 pages,
color photo plates, indexed, about $20 U.S. dollars
most places.
Excellent section on genetics, which you can apply to other species
besides lovebirds.
/Linda
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