Breaking

2.4.20

love birds


A bird of love and also Budgie, is one of the types of small-sized parrots and long-tailed and is the only representative of the sex of parrots, Where she has lived the challenge of drought and difficult life for nearly five million years. The wild of these birds is always green and yellow in color, and it has black scalloped marks on its back, the neck and flanks, but the selective marriage in captivity led to the emergence of domesticated individuals blue, white, yellow, gray, and other norms. Badji is one of the favorite ornamental birds all over the world, due to its small size, low price, its ability to imitate human voice, and its playful nature.

This small parrot is known to love to live as a husband, floating in huge swarms of varying sizes depending on the food supply. In years when rain is relatively high and food becomes plentiful, Dora or so-called love birds become one of the most numerous Australian parrots. Parrots are graceful and fast flying, and their herds rarely accompany one place for a long time. Her husband nests in colonies, and the husband may produce several chicks per season.

 and although they are called colloquial English, especially American, “parakitat” singular: paraket, this name is scientifically called several types of parakeets with long and flat tails. The origin of the name Budgerigar, localized to "Bujarika" is not known with certainty, but the species was officially registered on the World Bird List for the first time in the year 1805. These parrots marry when the surrounding environmental conditions or living conditions are appropriate, whether in captivity or in the wild. , She is a monogamous, meaning she is satisfied with one partner throughout her life. Like most parrots, lovebirds are known for their ability to mimic sounds.

These parrots were first introduced in Europe in approximately 1840, and by the second half of the nineteenth century they became common in pet stores, and breeders began to breed them in abundance to meet the increasing demand for them, and perhaps today it has become the most prevalent species of domestic parrots in the world, It is one of the most diverse in terms of shape, size and color, and the most different from its wild lineage. Durra in the Arabic language is the name of a feminine science meaning "the great pearl", and it is the inclusion of the signifier, and the pearl is also the precious thing, so the jewel of the crown, meaning the most prominent and most valuable thing in it, is said to have carried the meaning of the parrot with the Arabs in the past, and from it the name of the good bird that benefits the meaning of The precious or precious bird. Perhaps the name was given to these birds because of the passion shown by their husbands. Another common name in the western world is gear parakeet.

The Dorra or Badji birds were believed to form the link between the sexes of herbal parrots (Neophema) and terrestrial parrots (Pezoporus), based on the fact that each had striped feathers. However, recent racial genetic studies and experiments on DNA dialectics have shown that Dora birds are closer to Loriids and Fig Parrots, in fact, than the aforementioned gender. The average length of wild Dora birds is 18 centimeters (7 inches), and the weight of their females ranges between 24 and 40 grams, and their males are between 22 and 32 grams, and their feathers are pale green on the abdomen and the sponsor, but their coverage, i.e. the calves of the backs and wings, are dark black markings by the adults. And faded by the joys and events thereof, ending with visible yellow ripples. The forehead and face are yellow in adult birds. 

Males reach sexual maturity when they are between 3 to 4 months old, and when they reach 50 days they begin to seek other courses, and they try to rub whoever they are able to, and by about seventy days they will have chosen their future partner who will spend their lives with them, if they reach 105 Days of life have taken a partner for themselves, the initial writings state that the maximum life span of these birds in captivity ranged between 15 and 17 years, and although domesticated birds can reach this age, this condition remains rare and usually the maximum The birds reached it in the wild.



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