Crossbred
A crossbred Eurasian bullfinch is an avicultural label for Pyrrhula pyrrhula with mixed captive ancestry, often involving different color mutations, regional lines, or occasionally uncertain bullfinch parentage. The wild species is a stout, quiet finch of Europe and northern Asia, recognized by its black cap, short thick bill, pale wing bar, and the rosy-pink underparts of adult males. Captive records may mention normal pink, isabel, pied, white, or split birds, and a crossbred label warns that the bird should not be treated as a clean wild-type or locality line.
In care, crossbred bullfinches are managed much like other captive Eurasian bullfinches: roomy flights, calm surroundings, a quality finch seed mix, fresh greens, buds, berries, and seasonal soft food for breeding. They are not cage-canary substitutes and often do best in settled pairs away from aggressive birds. Laws on keeping native or wild-derived finches vary, so buyers should confirm paperwork before purchase. Crossbred birds should be labeled accurately and never released, since they can confuse conservation or local population genetics.
Colors: Black, Isabel, Normal Pink, Pied, White