Oh, I love parrots, but had to get rid of my Nanday Conure because he was too noisey where I lived and I haven't had the money to get another sinceI really really want a Hyacinth Macaw.. it's always been my favorite bird, but since it's endangered and the price of a used car, I can't get one.
Hyacinths are one of the only animals that are actually benefitting from rainforest destruction, oddly enough. Its because they can crack the palm nuts that passes thourough the digestive system of the cattle. When looking at parrots, I wanted a blue front amazon, but when you rescue, you don't really get to choose what you get. I did end up fostering a blue front for a while but he and my macaw didn't get along so I found a good home for him.
Same goes for Timmy my White's, if given the choice I would have gone for a blue phase, but he desperately needed a home so here he is (and has been for a good long while).
I'm a bit confused by the whole blue phase whites thing. I have a juvenile whites, Dumper who is a bluish green (today he's grey) and my female whites, Jade ranges from green bean color to a bright yellow/green. I thought I read somewhere that the bluish ones come from Australia and the green ones come from Indonesia. My whites are clearly different in shape and color. Would my Dumper be considered a blue phase?
Indonesian ones are the thinner longer ones and the Dumpys are An Australian species (subspecies(?)) in which the ones that the females can get really really fat. Blue phase I think is just selective breeding. http://art-gecko4.tripod.com/whitest...caresheet.html
Here's another forum with members displaying their blue phase, if those pics are any indication, the blue goes away over time. You could try gut loading your crickets with something that has lots of blue in it (boiled red cabbage goes very blue), like the way people feed lots of parsley to iguanas to keep them green, or feed paprika to red phase canaries to keep them red, and the way flamingos are only pink because of the red brine shrimp they eat. I don't know what food encourages blueness though.
Blue phase also might be factored in with might be a subtractive color so color feeding might not be possible to obtain it, or you might hae to have the frog with the genetics for blueness AND keep up with the keratine free diet (like the way that blue budgies and parrotlets etc get a blue phase by geneticly elimininating the yellow keritine creating a karatine-albinism).
Since the green does seem to return the frogs might be getting the keratine from something in the diet of the food (ie the crickets) who are likely raised on fish food and various greens and vegetables (like carrots), all of which are high in keratine.
I don't really know about the blue phase whites, I'm just making educated hypothesis.
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