Depending on the species, it's not too hard, and hybrids can be produced without the aid of AI!
With some species, such as the golden pheasant and lady Amherst's pheasant, the females are almost identical. Males will display to any female that looks like a member of its own species, and...
definitely a domestic pigeon, I would call this bird either a Birmingham roller or, what it looks more like to me, a tippler (both are small, thin-billed breeds)
HI!
something that also happens is birds enjoy where their water bowl is placed a little too much, to prevent this, make sure to watch you birds, if you see them preferring a site over the water bowl, you have two options:
one- make the site less comfortable by changing the perch layout...
info taken from the paper: "Hybridization and zoogeographic patterns in pheasants" Johnsgard, P. A. (1983) I have attached a link at the bottom, this post is a distilled version on the paper.
hybridizing pheasants can be a controversial and sometimes taboo topic, however, the fascinating...
ummm maybe?
Same-sex pairs are not uncommon in the bird world, most regularly in non-sexually dimorphic species (like pigeons!). While same-sex pairing has been recorded most commonly in gulls, penguins, and albatrosses it would not be impossible for it to occur in pigeons.
This being said...
If your pigeon is still in the area and has a preferred perch, you can use a rudimentary trap called a noose-carpet. this design is made from a piece of metal mesh or small-holed chicken wire, snare-knots are tied to the metal base, and then this is wrapped around a round surface or placed flat...
interestingly, Chicago pigeons also have the highest frequency of the spread phenotype of any sampled area. While the allele for this plumage type is dominant and epistatic to most patterns, it is usually quite rare. Stunningly, about 10% of the sampled population of Chicago showed the spread...
we have similar problems here in the east with pigeon controllers.......I was also unable to capture birds in Chicago on my visit there! However, the Feild museum has an incredible number of specimens, which stood in place of live birds (including many with long leg feathering!)
thank you for...
Hi everyone!
while doing fieldwork last year in Key West Florida, I found myself surrounded by feral chickens. likely descended from Cuban cockfighting birds, the chickens that roam freely through the Florida keys are, while technically feral, they behave as truly wild birds. I have put down...
This is my current map of domestic leg feathering, with red circles meaning breeders of feather-legged breeds, and blue rhombi showing the locations of documented feather-legged escapes..... it's basically a population density map
Thank you for asking!
The longest feathered legs occurred in the northern study regions (labeled regions 1 and 2 on the graph and shown in yellow and green on the map) the leg feathering of pigeons in southern regions (labeled 3 and four on the graph and shown in blue and red on the map) had...
Hi everyone!
got photos of peafowl footprints? I need them!
I am working on a study of feral peafowl in Florida, and investigating reports of green peafowl and green x blue hybrids being found around the state. One way of locating peafowl is via tracking and I am wondering if there is any...