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A half-sider budgerigar is an unusual
budgerigar The budgerigar ( ; ''Melopsittacus undulatus''), also known as the common parakeet or shell parakeet, is a small, long-tailed, seed-eating parrot usually nicknamed the budgie ( ), or in American English, the parakeet. Budgies are the only spe ...
variant that is one color on one side of its body and a different color on the other side, divided bilaterally down the center. This is not a simple genetic mutation, as can be observed in other color and pattern variations in this species. It is in fact a rare example of a tetragametic chimera, which originates when two fertilized embryos merge during a very early stage of development. Each half has different DNA, with genetically distinct cells and the resultant bird is in effect, two budgerigars fused together to form a single autonomous individual. In the case of the half-sider budgerigar, both embryos must possess different genetic phenotypes (one green, one blue, for example) in order for a visible half-sider to be produced. If both "halves" were the same color, it would still be a tetragametic chimera, but not a half-sider. It is also possible for the half-sider to be male on one side and female on the other (evidenced by a half blue, half brown
cere The beak, bill, or rostrum is an external anatomical structure found mostly in birds, but also in turtles, non-avian dinosaurs and a few mammals. A beak is used for eating, preening, manipulating objects, killing prey, fighting, probing for food, ...
) – an example of a bilateral gynandromorph. Breeding a half-sider is unlikely to produce more half-siders, even when breeding two half-siders together, as the genetic makeup of the half that contributed the cells that make up the reproductive system is that which would then be perpetuated, assuming that the bird is even fertile in the first place. The chance of producing another half-sider would be the same as for any other budgerigar pairing.


References

{{Budgerigar mutations Budgerigar colour mutations