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Fischer's Lovebird has a fast flight, and the sound of their wings as they fly can be heard.
Fischer's Lovebirds eat a wide variety of foods, including seeds and fruit.
The Fischer's Lovebird has a green back, chest, and wings.
While most Fischer's Lovebirds are green, several color variations have been bred.
The 52-cent stamp shows a pair of Fischer's lovebirds on a palm frond.
Fischer's Lovebirds, like many captive birds, can suffer from feather-plucking if they get bored or stressed.
Fischer's lovebirds are kept in captivity.
Fischer's Lovebirds show no sexual dimorphism, therefore it is impossible to tell whether an individual is male or female through plumage alone.
Balaeniceps rex (shoebill) and Agapornis fischeri (Fischer's lovebird) are also reported.
He is commemorated in the names of a number of animals, including Fischer's Lovebird, Agapornis fischeri.
The Fischer's Lovebird (Agapornis fischeri) is a small parrot species of the Agapornis genus.
Fischer's Lovebird are native to a small area of east-central Africa, south and southeast of Lake Victoria in northern Tanzania.
The Lilian's Lovebird is often mistaken for the slightly larger Fischer's Lovebird, which has an olive-green hood and a blue rump.
The Fischer's Lovebird, Black-cheeked Lovebird, and the Masked Lovebird have a prominent white ring around their eyes.
One hypothesis is that they suffer from hormonal problems caused by changing light levels and the inability to perform things Fischer's lovebirds in the wild would naturally perform, such as building a nest.
Fischer's Lovebirds are prone to a mysterious disease characterized by having brownish to creamish patches in their feet and legs, which is probably an infection as a result of their obsessive biting of those areas.
Small exhibits that appear carved or surrounded by rock simulate a natural kopje; these include serval, bushbaby, meerkat, black-footed cat, rock hyrax, masked and Fischer's lovebird, bat-eared fox, and black-throated monitor.
He is commemorated in the names of a number of animals, including Fischer's Lovebird, Agapornis fischeri.
The sexes of Agapornis fischeri appear the same, and are distinguished with certainty through DNA testing, and less certainly by their habits in perching.