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  2. Lutino cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutino_cockatiel

    The "albino" cockatiel also known as the whiteface lutino, is not the result of albinism. It is a breed that combines two genes of whiteface and lutino. The "Whiteface gene" removes all the yellow and orange that would be present in a Lutino, and the "Lutino gene" removes all the black and grey. So it has all white plumage, red eyes and pink ...

  3. White-faced cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-faced_cockatiel

    The "albino cockatiel" is not a true albino, it is a combination of a "white-faced cockatiel" and a "Lutino cockatiel". The "Whiteface gene" removes all the yellow and orange that would be present in a Lutino. and the "Lutino gene" removes all the black and grey. The result is an all white cockatiel with red eyes. [4]

  4. Cockatiel colour genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockatiel_colour_genetics

    The Lutino sex-linked recessive mutation is a perfect example of a type of cockatiel that are the hardest to sex visually. Lutinos lack eumelanin pigment (enabling black, brown, grey colours and tones) and are consequently yellow to yellowish-white with orange cheek-patches.

  5. Cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockatiel

    Cockatiel colour mutations can become even more complex as one bird can have multiple colour mutations. For example, a yellow lutino cockatiel may have pearling – white spots on its back and wings. This is a double mutation. An example of a quadruple mutation would be cinnamon cockatiel with yellowface colouring with pearling and pied ...

  6. Pied cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pied_cockatiel

    The Pied cockatiel is the first mutation of cockatiel colour genetics, with a mostly grey to light-yellow and white feathers and orange cheek patches.. Pied cockatiels have large, random blotches of colour on their bodies, after the "normal grey" or "wild type" of a cockatiel's plumage is primarily grey with prominent white flashes on the outer edges of each wing.

  7. Lutino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutino

    Lutino is a bird that exhibits a yellow pigmentation known as xanthochromism. It may refer to: Lutino budgies; Lutino cockatiel mutation;

  8. Bronze fallow cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze_Fallow_Cockatiel

    When a bronze fallow cockatiel is born, it has a pale pink eye. As they mature ,the eye color slightly darkens, a bronze fallow cockatiel's eyes are lighter than a Lutino cockatiel, whose red eye is darker. A yellow wash may emerge across the body. [2] One feature is unlike other mutations. Male bronze fallow cockatiels differ from females.

  9. Ino budgerigar mutation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ino_budgerigar_mutation

    It is not epistatic over the Blue mutation, so there are two forms of the albino budgerigar, one in the green series called the Lutino and one in the blue series called the Albino. Both these varieties may be masking many other hypostatic mutations, so the genotype of an Albino or Lutino with respect to these mutations cannot be determined ...