a cere
a cere
Parakeets have a beak and the thing above it which is called the cere.
it just means that she is ready to breed
If you are referring to their feathers getting darker or lighter as they mature then no. But in normal types of parakeets, such as the normal greens and blues, they have bars on their faces going down to their beaks that will vanish as they mature. If you are asking about their Cere (the fleshy part on their beak) It can be quite complicated. In MALE babies the cere will be a TRANSLUCENT pink with maybe some OPAQUE white around the nostrils. For FEMALES the cere will be mostly an OPAQUE white and maybe little blue. This is not always set in stone however. When they mature, males will have BLUE ceres and when it is breeding season they will turn an even darker blue. Keep in mind that this is for NORMAL parakeets; not lutinos or albinos. In normal female parakeets, the cere can range in colors. The femal's cere may be brown, white, pink, and various shades inbetween. When a female enters breeding season their cere will get a crusty look and will be a dark brown. After breeding season has passed the cere crust will fall off.
Parakeets breath through their cere, The small but cute set of openings located above their beak.
a male parakeets cere is dark (dark purple blue ect.)
Sounds like a female! When she is ready to breed she will get a brown flaky cere. And some females will develop blue cere's when around other females more than males.
If by face, you mean the cere (area above the beak, surrounding the nostrils), then no it just means that your female is not in breeding condition. I think parakeets more naturally breed in the spring, so if you wrote this anytime recently (ie winter), this is normal.
No. Kookaburras do not have a cere.
Depending on your Parakeets color, it's perfectly normal for parakeets to not have blue on it's head...
it means that it is a female if it is younger then 1 year and it just turned around 9 months that means you have a female! I hope i helped!