Budgies vary tremendously, and it is one of the reasons why breeding budgies is so entertaining. The resulting babies could be green, grey, pied green-grey or something quite different, like a blue, depending on the recessive genes.
There is a variety of colour possibilities for the budgie chicks:
It depends on the parents of the parent birds.
The beauty of budgies is that you never know what you might get. You could get all white, all yellow, pied yellow-and-white or a throwback to a recessive gene that is blue or green.
yes I would say it is possible.
No. A color of a budgie has nothing to do with the way they play but if you had a boy and a girl budgie, the boy would be more easier to teach and more playful as the female budgie tends to bite a lot harder than the male budgie I have over 20 budgies and I got to say the male budgie gets along with each better than the female budgies who will fight for space Ihope this answers your Question.
You would get blue-green.
Only if you want them to mate. It would help the female during the process of incubation.
You would get a yellow-green.
When naming a tertiary colour the primary colour is named first. Therefore it would be Blue-green. Followed in order by: Green and Yellow-green.
The girl budgie would attack the new boy budgie and not the old girl budgie because she is used to the other girl budgie and is not familiar to the new boy budgie.
A male budgie's beak, or rather, the cere above the beak, does not turn brown. A mature male budgie has a blue cere. If your budgie's cere has turned brown, you have a female that is ready to breed.
Green is traditionally used to represent farmland on maps, as green symbolizes vegetation and agriculture. Blue is typically used to represent water bodies or features on maps.
Twice the amount of the same shade of green that you started with.
Yellow-green.
The colour would be green.