Celestial or Pacific Parrotlet Mutations – Forpus coelestis

In captivity, a variety of mutations have occurred, including blue, yellow / lutino, white, blue pastel, green fallow, blue fallow, pied, and dilute. Below listed are the most common …

FREE Training to Stop Your Bird's Biting

Get FREE access to Beak School – the only system designed to train your bird. Stop behavioral problems like biting, screaming, feather plucking.

Get the Free Training

Parrotlet InformationParrotlet SpeciesParrotlet Photo Gallery

FREE Training to Stop Your Bird's Biting

Get FREE access to Beak School – the only system designed to train your bird. Stop behavioral problems like biting, screaming, feather plucking.

Get the Free Training
Pacific Parrotlets: 1 Albino, 1 Normal Green, 1 Blue Mutation
  • Albino Mutation: All-white plumage with red eyes. Recessive gene: both parents have to carry it to produce white offspring.
  • White Mutation: White plumage except for some soft blue markings on the wing. The eyes are dark / black. Recessive gene: both parents have to carry it to produce white offspring.
  • Lutino Mutation: The plumage is mostly lemon yellow; except the areas of plumage that are blue in the normal green male are white in the lutino male. The eyes are red. Sex-linked mutation.
  • Blue Mutation: Males have a plumage of varying shades of blues, generally a soft powder blue with silvery, greyish-blue wash on the nape (back of the neck) and back. The face is turquoise blue; and the rump, back, and wings are deep cobalt blue. Females lack the cobalt blue rump and wings. Juveniles have a duller plumage. Simple recessive mutation – requiring both parents to carry the gene in order for the trait to show up visually in the young.
  • Fallow Mutation: The plumage is golden green with the same cobalt blue markings of the normal form. Males have a bright yellow face. Females have a duller plumage and lack the cobalt markings. Simple recessive mutation – requiring both parents to carry the gene in order for the trait to show up visually in the young.
  • American Dark Factor (Olive): A mostly olive-green plumage with very dark flight feathers. Immature birds have a darker plumage and lighten as they get older.
  • Other Mutations: Cobalt, Pied …
“Norman” - an American White Pacific Parrotlet
Pastel Pacific Parrotlet Mutation
Blue Fallow Mutation - Pacific Parrotlet Chicks
Chicks - Pacific parrotlets
Pacific Parrotlet Mutations
Pacific Mutations
Photo of author

Team Beauty of Birds

Beautyofbirds.com's team of experts includes veterinarians, biologists, environmentalists and active bird watchers. All put together, we have over half a century of experience in the birding space.

You can meet our team here.
Team Beauty of Birds is separate from the “Parrot Parent University” parrot training course and its instructors.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.