Mixed Breed
In rosy-faced lovebirds, mixed breed is a loose pet-trade or rescue label for a bird whose color-line history is mixed or undocumented. Agapornis roseicollis, also called the peach-faced lovebird, has been bred in a wide range of mutations, from green and blue-series birds to lutino, creamino, aqua, pied, cinnamon, orange-face, and dark-factor forms. A mixed-breed label does not by itself identify a health issue or a separate species, but it does warn that the bird's ancestry may not match a show or breeding standard.
For a household bird, behavior and tameness usually matter more than pedigree. These parrots are active, pair-oriented, and quick to shred paper or wood, so durable enrichment and daily attention are important if one is kept singly. Breeders should be cautious about selling offspring as a specific mutation unless inheritance is clear. Because lovebirds can be territorial around nests, mixed or not, pairing and cage introductions need observation rather than assuming any two birds will coexist.
Colors: Albino, American Yellow, Aqua, Australian Cinnamon, Blue, Creamino, Dark Factor, Double Dark Factor, Dutch Pied, Green, Lutino, Orange Face, Pale Head, Pallid, Pied, Slate, Violet