I would say that your parakeet is probably a girl. I did a lot of research on parakeets sexes and about training them. I am a parakeet expert and I know a lot about them. I am very certain that your parakeet is a female. A males cere is white with a tint of blue and pink.
--Hope I helped
Dr. M.C
a male parakeets cere is dark (dark purple blue ect.)
Males have a purple to dark blue colored cere (nose) and females have a white to light pink to brown (when ready to breed) cere.
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
well i have 2 keets myself and i myself isn't sure iwhich one it which. online it says that females have a tan or pink cere. and males have blue-purplish. but the owner i got them from says the pink is male and the blue is female i don't know which one is which yet. we will see if they mate That is incorrect males have blue and females have dark pink and a little brown in them. So your parakeet is a female.
The cere, a patch of skin around the nostrils, is blueish in males, pink in females.
The male (Boy) parakeets have a BLUE nose/cere (right above the beak) and females have a PINK or BROWN nose/cere, and babies are white, purple or in between so you will not be a ble to tell until they are older. you can google it just tipe in "Pictures of male parakeet" and when that comes up google "female parakeet pictures" and you should see what they look like
So the male Parakeet has a blueish cere, and the female has a pinkish brown cere. Here is a bad picture of what it kinda looks like
The sex of a parakeet can often be determined by its cere, which is the fleshy area above its beak. In most cases, adult males have a blue or purplish cere, while adult females have a pink, brown, or tan cere. However, DNA testing is the most accurate way to determine the sex of a parakeet.
yes
if you said brown cere that is a female
a boy.
It is not the beak that use to tell the gender. The cere above the beak at 6 months will normally turn dark on a males but not a females