Crossbred
A crossbred society finch is a domestic society finch, also called a Bengalese finch, with parentage that does not sit within a single clearly described line or show variety. Society finches are long-established aviculture birds descended from munia-type finches, valued for their steady temperament, small flock behavior, and many domestic color patterns. Crossbred may refer to mixed family lines, mixed color backgrounds, or birds whose breeder records no longer separate one strain from another.
For keepers, the useful information is not the label by itself but the bird's condition, age, sex, compatibility, and whether it was raised in a stable aviary. Society finches usually do best in social groups with clean seed, greens, mineral access, and enough flight space to stay active. Breeders tracking color outcomes should pair known birds and record parentage carefully, while casual aviaries can treat crossbred birds as normal domestic society finches rather than as a special category.
Colors: Chocolate, Cream, Fawn, Pearl, Pied Brown, Pied Chocolate, Self White, Variegated Brown, Variegated Chocolate, White, Wild Brown