Asked by Lee yongbok felix
I have a bird its a girl and I still don't know her species shes a puffy big boba eye bird shes similar to a black rosy finch but without the white hair she has a tiny black peak too pls find her species
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I can try — I just need a bit more information. From your short description I can only guess, but if you can answer any of these or (best) upload a photo it will make ID much easier:
Questions
- Where are you (country / region)?
- About how big is she (cm or inches)? (sparrow-sized, canary-sized, parrot-sized?)
- Overall colors — head, chest, wings, tail? Any stripes, spots, or distinct patches?
- Beak shape and color — short and cone-shaped (finch style) or long/curved?
- Leg/feet color?
- Any white ring around the eye or other facial markings?
- Is she a pet bird (bred in captivity) or a wild bird you found?
- Sound/behavior — does she sing? hops a lot, clings, or likes to chew?
Likely possibilities from your brief description
- Society (Bengalese) finch: plump, “puffy” domestic finch, plain colors, small conical beak. Very common as pets.
- Zebra finch: small, plump; females are duller than males and lack the male’s black/white cheek and chest bars.
- Java (Java sparrow / Java finch): stocky and round with a relatively thick beak; comes in dark or grey color morphs.
- Canary: plump, round-bodied; usually yellow or brownish depending on type.
- Waxbills/astrilds (e.g., common waxbill): small, rounded finches — many have a dark/black bill or eye-marking but differ by species.
- If you’re in North America and it looked very wild and dark like a “black rosy finch” — it might simply be a dark sparrow/junco or another wild finch, but those are less likely to be tame/pet birds.
If you can, please upload a clear photo (side view and face close-up), or give the extra details above and I’ll narrow it down and give care/sexing tips. If you’d rather not upload a photo, tell me: country, size, beak color/shape, and main plumage colors.
Questions
- Where are you (country / region)?
- About how big is she (cm or inches)? (sparrow-sized, canary-sized, parrot-sized?)
- Overall colors — head, chest, wings, tail? Any stripes, spots, or distinct patches?
- Beak shape and color — short and cone-shaped (finch style) or long/curved?
- Leg/feet color?
- Any white ring around the eye or other facial markings?
- Is she a pet bird (bred in captivity) or a wild bird you found?
- Sound/behavior — does she sing? hops a lot, clings, or likes to chew?
Likely possibilities from your brief description
- Society (Bengalese) finch: plump, “puffy” domestic finch, plain colors, small conical beak. Very common as pets.
- Zebra finch: small, plump; females are duller than males and lack the male’s black/white cheek and chest bars.
- Java (Java sparrow / Java finch): stocky and round with a relatively thick beak; comes in dark or grey color morphs.
- Canary: plump, round-bodied; usually yellow or brownish depending on type.
- Waxbills/astrilds (e.g., common waxbill): small, rounded finches — many have a dark/black bill or eye-marking but differ by species.
- If you’re in North America and it looked very wild and dark like a “black rosy finch” — it might simply be a dark sparrow/junco or another wild finch, but those are less likely to be tame/pet birds.
If you can, please upload a clear photo (side view and face close-up), or give the extra details above and I’ll narrow it down and give care/sexing tips. If you’d rather not upload a photo, tell me: country, size, beak color/shape, and main plumage colors.
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