Budgies are native to Australia
Yes, they are called budgies.
yes it does. It makes them healthier.
I assume that you might be talking about budgies, if so, their class is called 'Aves'.
budgies and parakeets are the same things so yes
30 grams is an excellent weight for an American parakeet. English Budgies are a larger bird and will weigh more.
No. Budgies cannot eat onions, avocados, rhubarb, chocolate, or dairy products.
There is only one way in English, "parakeet" (some also referred to as budgies).The term comes from the Spanish periquito.
You can capture one from the wild. you don't have to go to India, you can go to south-east England!
If, by "parakeet", you mean any of the smallish parrots with long tails, such as budgies or cockatiels, then no, it most certainly does not have to be the same colour.
Presuming that 'parakeet' means budgie, even though there is actually no species known as a parakeet, the cere, which is the part above a budgies's beak where their nostrils are, is bright blue on a mature male budgie.
They have multi-colored feathers. Most people would call them parakeets, although they are a different species.Budgies are the smallest members of the parrot family, so they have the characteristic short curved beak of a parrot. English budgies have had the slenderness bred out of them, are larger than normal budgies and tend to have a rounded shape.In their natural state, budgies are slender birds, about 18cm in length. The male has a blue waxy membrane above its beak called the cere, where the nostrils are, whilst the equivalent in a breeding female is brown, and pale in a non-breeding bird. Wild budgies are green, but years of selective breeding of captive birds have produced a great variety of colours, including other shades of green, yellow, all the shades of blue, lilac and violet, white and pied (mixtures of any of the colours).The term parakeet actually covers a variety of small to medium sized parrots with long tails. There is actually no such species as a parakeet. Any bird known by this term has another name, but has been "lumped in" together with other small-medium long-tailed parrots (e.g. the Alexandrine Parakeet is actually an Alexandrine Parrot, and the Abyssinian Parakeet is actually an Abyssinian Ringneck).