Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Moderator: Mods

Post Reply
Lushen1600
Posts: 499
Joined: Sat Feb 26, 2011 11:18 am
Location: Pietermaritzburg, South Africa

Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Lushen1600 »

Hi has the Spangle mutation been bred in an indian ringneck and if so does anyone have pics of such a mutation and what to look for to identify a spangle in the indian ringneck

Thanks
Lushen
2014 Pairs
Green x Green
DGreen x DBlue
DE Blue/ino x DBlue
Grey/ino x Albino
Pallidino x Lutino
DE Blue Turq x Grey
DE Grey Turq x Blue
Greygreen/cinn x DE Blue Cinn
DE DBlue Turq x Blue Turq CHWT
Blue x DBlue Turq
Blue x Blue Pallid
Lutino/blue x Blue
prodigy
Posts: 341
Joined: Thu Feb 02, 2012 10:52 am
Location: South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by prodigy »

Image
madas
Posts: 973
Joined: Thu Dec 18, 2008 11:12 am
Contact:

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by madas »

Probably the dom. pied aka harlequin mutation is the spangle mutation but it needs further investigation.
Harlequin shares a lot of features with the budgie spangle mutation.

madas
Carr.birds
Posts: 230
Joined: Thu Jan 07, 2010 1:13 pm
Location: Bloemfontein South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Carr.birds »

Stefan

We share the same opinion, but what test is available to proof the point.

Tienie
Recio
Posts: 966
Joined: Thu Mar 26, 2009 2:09 am
Location: France

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Recio »

Hi Lee,

There are other reasons : inheritance pattern and increased psittacin fluorescence in both species.

Regards

Recio
madas
Posts: 973
Joined: Thu Dec 18, 2008 11:12 am
Contact:

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by madas »

And one more. Most (nearly all) Harlequin show a small edged Pattern in the flightfeathers. Sometimes very good marked and visible like in the birds of John Shannon and sometimes hard to find resp. see resp. indentify.

Pics will follow.

Madas
trabots
Posts: 597
Joined: Tue Oct 23, 2012 5:18 pm

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by trabots »

The flight feathers in the image were clearly damaged during growth so is it a mutation?
Lushen1600
Posts: 499
Joined: Sat Feb 26, 2011 11:18 am
Location: Pietermaritzburg, South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Lushen1600 »

Hi all, thanks for the replies and thank you Peter for the pic, how old is the ringneck in the pic?

Thanks
Lushen
2014 Pairs
Green x Green
DGreen x DBlue
DE Blue/ino x DBlue
Grey/ino x Albino
Pallidino x Lutino
DE Blue Turq x Grey
DE Grey Turq x Blue
Greygreen/cinn x DE Blue Cinn
DE DBlue Turq x Blue Turq CHWT
Blue x DBlue Turq
Blue x Blue Pallid
Lutino/blue x Blue
Ring0Neck
Posts: 1714
Joined: Thu May 22, 2008 2:24 am
Location: Brisbane QLD AUS

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Ring0Neck »

Molossus,
IRNs in that the hen retains her full spangle whilst the cock loses this ...


I have personally seen grey spangle (patern was similar to the Alex spangle in the pic)at a breeder i visited some 4 years ago and it was understood at the time that the cock will lose its spangle at 2-3 years of age (something to do with the hormonal change..), as far as the hens i thought they never get the spangle.
I shall try to get in touch with him again to get some concrete info.
Price was same as a new car back then, so no i did not buy any spangle, i got the car instead... did i make the right choice? :lol:
Johan S
Posts: 1215
Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2011 1:24 am
Location: Pretoria, South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Johan S »

Ring0Neck wrote:Price was same as a new car back then, so no i did not buy any spangle, i got the car instead... did i make the right choice? :lol:
How many babies did the car have to date? Enough said! :lol:
Lushen1600
Posts: 499
Joined: Sat Feb 26, 2011 11:18 am
Location: Pietermaritzburg, South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Lushen1600 »

Hi Molossus, thanks for the pics, the spangle markings on the alexandrine looks similar to spangle markings of a budgerigar, is it possible to achieve similar feather markings on a ringneck and has anyone have pic of ringneck with spangle markings similar to the alexandrine


Thanks
Lushen
2014 Pairs
Green x Green
DGreen x DBlue
DE Blue/ino x DBlue
Grey/ino x Albino
Pallidino x Lutino
DE Blue Turq x Grey
DE Grey Turq x Blue
Greygreen/cinn x DE Blue Cinn
DE DBlue Turq x Blue Turq CHWT
Blue x DBlue Turq
Blue x Blue Pallid
Lutino/blue x Blue
Lushen1600
Posts: 499
Joined: Sat Feb 26, 2011 11:18 am
Location: Pietermaritzburg, South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Lushen1600 »

Hi, a south african breeder ask me to post pics of a bird he bred, here are 2 pics of the bird in question

Image

Image

So can this bird be considered a spangle, if not what mutation will one call this

Thanks
Lushen
2014 Pairs
Green x Green
DGreen x DBlue
DE Blue/ino x DBlue
Grey/ino x Albino
Pallidino x Lutino
DE Blue Turq x Grey
DE Grey Turq x Blue
Greygreen/cinn x DE Blue Cinn
DE DBlue Turq x Blue Turq CHWT
Blue x DBlue Turq
Blue x Blue Pallid
Lutino/blue x Blue
Johan S
Posts: 1215
Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2011 1:24 am
Location: Pretoria, South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Johan S »

molossus wrote:No Lushen.
This is most likely a turq pallid. the red eye is the give away here. The beautiful barring is the orderly placement of psittacins on the wing of the bird.
I agree 100%. This seems like the normal juvenile barring for certain parblues. The only thing I'd add to Molossus' conclusion is possibly the grey factor as well. It could be the pictures, but the bird shows a greyish wash and not the typical blue for a turquoise(blue) pallid.
Lushen1600
Posts: 499
Joined: Sat Feb 26, 2011 11:18 am
Location: Pietermaritzburg, South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Lushen1600 »

Thanks for the reply guys, will let the breeder know

Thanks
Lushen
2014 Pairs
Green x Green
DGreen x DBlue
DE Blue/ino x DBlue
Grey/ino x Albino
Pallidino x Lutino
DE Blue Turq x Grey
DE Grey Turq x Blue
Greygreen/cinn x DE Blue Cinn
DE DBlue Turq x Blue Turq CHWT
Blue x DBlue Turq
Blue x Blue Pallid
Lutino/blue x Blue
Lushen1600
Posts: 499
Joined: Sat Feb 26, 2011 11:18 am
Location: Pietermaritzburg, South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Lushen1600 »

Hi received more pics from the breeder, here are pic of the parents of the above youngster. Male is supposed to be a grey misty and hen is green. The breeder would like to know why the grey male has red eyes

Image

Here is another chick of the youngster together with a nest sibling

Image

And my question to you guys, if these youngsters are infact turquoise pallid, why does the turq only affect the wings and has no affect on the head that a normal turq pallid has. I would have expected to see yellow on the head as well. Can someone explain?

Thanks
Lushen
2014 Pairs
Green x Green
DGreen x DBlue
DE Blue/ino x DBlue
Grey/ino x Albino
Pallidino x Lutino
DE Blue Turq x Grey
DE Grey Turq x Blue
Greygreen/cinn x DE Blue Cinn
DE DBlue Turq x Blue Turq CHWT
Blue x DBlue Turq
Blue x Blue Pallid
Lutino/blue x Blue
Johan S
Posts: 1215
Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2011 1:24 am
Location: Pretoria, South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Johan S »

I find the most interesting thing about the parents the feet. The cock shows dark feet, rather inconsistent with fallows, and the hen shows very pink feet. I have no idea why the cock shows a red eye.

It is not uncommon for some types of parblues to have blue (resp. white) heads. The heads of the offspring are white because we are probably dealing with the indigo morphotype. That, and the fact that these birds were very young when the picture was taken. The yellow would have increased with time.
angeldc77
Posts: 167
Joined: Tue Aug 24, 2010 3:53 pm

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by angeldc77 »

It almost sounds like this possible spangle mutation acts a lot like the pearl mutation in cockatiels the hen retains the pattern while most males loose most of the pattern.
angeldc77
Posts: 167
Joined: Tue Aug 24, 2010 3:53 pm

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by angeldc77 »

I try to keep quiet most of the time and read all the discussions, you guys make great teachers. I must admit at times I do get a little lost, but never intimidated. You guys are at a whole other level that I can appreciate. But it was easy for me to make that comparison as I dove into the wonderful world of genetics with cockatiels first.
keeskk16
Posts: 57
Joined: Mon Sep 24, 2012 1:06 pm
Location: holland

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by keeskk16 »

this is a nice new colour
Mad Max
Posts: 97
Joined: Sun Mar 10, 2013 10:12 am
Location: Nigel , South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Mad Max »

Any newer pictures

Peter (The blue you are holding with wing open)
Lushen (The youngsters as they have progressed)

Thanks
Robert
Skyes_crew
Posts: 1946
Joined: Thu Feb 28, 2013 12:49 pm
Location: Hawaii

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by Skyes_crew »

The spangle pattern is very similar to what occurs naturally in malabars, moustache, Derbyans, and the Philippine blue nape.
I am owned by my birds...and I wouldn't have it any other way :D

Image
prodigy
Posts: 341
Joined: Thu Feb 02, 2012 10:52 am
Location: South Africa

Re: Spangle Mutation in Indian Ringnecks

Post by prodigy »

The cock is split Pallid
Post Reply