Komodo99
Well-Known Member
Hopefully without the screaming relatives and Security Steve.Is this Jeremy Kyle now![]()
Hopefully without the screaming relatives and Security Steve.Is this Jeremy Kyle now![]()
Is this Jeremy Kyle now![]()
The zoos Facebook page just announced a new species going on show
You've been beaten to itThe zoo have uploaded a video of the new arrivals to their Facebook page.
See companion "marsupials" thread.The zoos Facebook page just announced a new species going on show
I didn't know that. I had always thought blue colouration in green magpies was solely due to a lack of caretonoids in the diet. But I googled it and indeed blue colouration results not only from dietary deficiencies but also prolonged exposure to sun. I saw a blue individual in the wild once (with normal green ones) and thought that was really odd, but apparently there is also the occasional blue mutation which simply lacks the yellow pigment, irrespective of diet or sun.Some supplemental information about the Javan green magpie enclosure: as suspected the birds need a dark environment otherwise they'll turn blue, hence the lack of light in their enclosure.
You missed the small print.In view of SMR's quoting of the bear cub being a she and calling it her...
The sign beside the green magpie's flight says that their diet must contain supplementary pigment to maintain their colouration. I was surprised at this as other green birds do not appear to need such a diet, but on thinking about it I realised that most other green birds are largely vegetarian (for example many parrots and fruit pigeons) and so their food contains natural plant pigments. Do the green jays have a more omnivorous diet or do they need supplements too? Your blue bird may have been recently fledged, as I believe that young birds are bluer than adults.I didn't know that. I had always thought blue colouration in green magpies was solely due to a lack of caretonoids in the diet. But I googled it and indeed blue colouration results not only from dietary deficiencies but also prolonged exposure to sun. I saw a blue individual in the wild once (with normal green ones) and thought that was really odd, but apparently there is also the occasional blue mutation which simply lacks the yellow pigment, irrespective of diet or sun.
green is actually really interesting in birds. I think most people are aware of the unique copper-based green pigment which touracos possess (turacoverdin). The green in parrots is also from non-diet-related pigments in the feathers called psittacofulvins (or psittacins) which are unique to parrots. Psittacofulvin pigments aren't green in themselves, but red or yellow, which combine with blue to form the appearance of being green - but psittacofulvins are independent of diet, so parrots remain green irrespective of what they are fed in captivity. I've been looking at this over the course of the day and it seems that all other bird greens are due to dietary-obtained carotenoids, including in fruit doves.The sign beside the green magpie's flight says that their diet must contain supplementary pigment to maintain their colouration. I was surprised at this as other green birds do not appear to need such a diet, but on thinking about it I realised that most other green birds are largely vegetarian (for example many parrots and fruit pigeons) and so their food contains natural plant pigments. Do the green jays have a more omnivorous diet or do they need supplements too?
I pondered that, as I had recently seen a photo of one of the young Chester birds (perhaps a photo of yours) which was greenish-blue. The one I saw was greenish-blue also, not the unnatural-looking blue I have seen in captive adult birds, so it could have been a younger individual. It was very noticeably not the regular green though.Your blue bird may have been recently fledged, as I believe that young birds are bluer than adults.
According to Zootierliste, I should have seen hunting Cissa, Cissa chinensis, at Chester and Blackpool many years ago (if they were actually on show) but I cannot remember them at all. It is found from north-eastern India to Malaysia, plus Java and part of Borneo. Two other Cissa species are found in Indochina and in Borneo. The Javan species has the shortest tail. See https://www.theguardian.com/science/grrlscientist/2012/mar/25/6 for more information about pigmentation and colour changes as described by Chlidonias.There seems a lot of recent comment on Chester's 'Javan Green Magpies'. I formerly knew these- or a closely related species anyway, as 'Hunting Cissa'. Bristol had them in the 1960's in the aviary nearest the Monkey Temple. . . .
Images on Google show both green and blue ones.
Cissa chinensis is found in Sumatra, but not Java.It is found from north-eastern India to Malaysia, plus Java and part of Borneo.
Yes, my mistakeCissa chinensis is found in Sumatra, but not Java.