No. Kookaburras do not have a cere.
A budgie with a blue and purple cere is likely a female. In budgies, males typically have a blue cere while females have a purple or brown cere. The color of the cere can sometimes indicate the gender of the budgie.
A Laughing kookaburra IS a normal kookaburra, and the only one completely native to Australia alone. It is one of four universally recognised species of kookaburra, the others being the Blue-winged kookaburra, Spangled kookaburra and Rufous-bellied kookaburra.
sexing a budgie is relatively easy. if the bird has a blue cere its a male if it has a pink or brown cere its a female
Cere comes from the Latin word cera, which means "wax".
a budgies gender is found by lookin at it cere the cere is the small thing found on top of the beak if the cere is blue it is simply a male but females are a dark tan the cere will darken as the budgie gets older. Thank-you!
A kookaburra is a bird - a species of kingfisher.
A cere is the waxy part above the budgie's beak. It is where the bird's nostrils are. In males it is blue, while females have a pale cere except for when they're breeding - then it turns brown.
"Kookaburra" is the correct spelling.
it is unknown
The cere is the bird's beak. It is used as a feeding device for the bird and as a defense mechanism.
The kookaburra's laugh is a territorial call. People cannot make a kookaburra laugh.
"Kookaburra" in French is "un dacelo".