Male.As you can see, its coloration on plumage has turned from light buff into bright orange over time.According to the owner, it's a mixed duccle rooster x female Golden hybrid.The father of the whitish big- headed hen is a motley-colored ♂Silkie,tho. Maybe you guys should turn to...
Yes,there were few cases where such female hybrids laid eggs but just some old pdf description without any reliable pics.What I know for sure is that such hybrids can inherit the combs from chicken (very tiny but seeable), which ringneck x chicken(100%infertile)can't. Also, the head of female...
Golden pheasants x chicken hybrids.Partially fertile, since some females have reportedly laid eggs and successfully crossbred with roosters.The male hybrid don't have stunning plumage like pheasants and look more like a female chicken, tho.
Haha, actually you can see them as pairs of opaque spectacles designed for fowls which can effectively prevent roosters from the deaths or injuries from fighting because of most of their eyesight getting blocked.It's quite common in China.
New mute pheasant breed,also got a few metalic blue and extremely unique-looking mute pheasant cocks. Gonna cross them with Japanese green pheasant and zebra-striped pheasant as soon as the females are ready for laying eggs.
Here's some screenshots of my ordered Koklass. Also gonna raise some temmincks Tragopan and Blue Eared this year and cross them with 15 different existing species next year.
Bravo, :thumbsupmuch better than Silver pheasant, but can we see more, like those real unique and bizarre ones?I ordered a Koklass with bluish grey fantail recently (gonna arrive on July 1st )and will put it into different pheasant groups to get some hybrids.Id like to perform AI if necessary...
Here's some of my new findings.
Not only do these 2 hybrids look uniquely stunning, but they're also fertile and very sexually active just like pure-breed males.The most amazing part is that the second hybrid's tail outshines both his father's and the male one's of his mother's breed.Both the...
I just found out that more than 50 species of fowls in Galliformes are closely related and can produce fertile offspring with each other despite their great differences in colors, builds and vocalization.That means we can totally create “integrated pheasants ”exactly the way we want them to...