I’m getting a little scholarly as of date reading all these manuals that my biologist-friend from UP has sent to me through e-mail, when she learned that I was into breeding zebra finches. I don’t profess to understand everything I’ve read, but this one scientific study caught my attention because I instinctively cannot figure out how to make the colors of my male zebras stand-out by giving them the proper food. We all know that the male is more “colorful” in a sense compared to the female, and this study has proven that the male actually gets more carotenoids/pigments in their food intake. The start of the paper reads like this:

Here, we studied within- and between-sex patterns of food intake and plasma pigment circulation in the Zebra Finch (Taeniopygia guttata) to assess how sexually dichromatic, carotenoid-based bill pigmentation serves as an indicator of pigment access in the diet and carotenoid transport through the bloodstream. First, in a food-choice study, we found that males and females did not consume different types or amounts of food, despite dramatic sex differences in bill coloration. Similarly, variability in carotenoid-based bill pigmentation within each sex was uncoupled from levels of food consumption. Next, we used high-performance liquid-chromatography (HPLC) to quantify the types and amounts of carotenoids circulating through blood. Male and female Zebra Finches circulated the same four major carotenoid pigments in blood plasma (lutein, zeaxanthin, anhydrolutein, and cryptoxanthin), but males circulated a significantlyhigher concentration of plasma carotenoids than did females. Within both sexes, individuals thatcirculated more carotenoid pigments displayed more brightly colored bills. In sum, these resultssuggest that physiological factors such as pigment transport may play a more important role inshaping variability in carotenoid-based bill coloration in this species than does diet. Future studiesshould be aimed at identifying the proximate determinants of plasma carotenoid circulationin these birds as well as how circulated pigments are used to produce maximum color displays.

You may download the research article here. I am thinking we can apply the same concept to our gouldians and canaries.