- Sep 16, 2021
- 247
- 154
well I haven't done any DNA test but I take them to a vet once a year (they are hand tamed) he told me they are most probably female ( you can check by touching their pubic bones [I don't know what they are called but they have two bones around pubis], Female ones have more gap between them). They also have a nest, I think if they were different genders they would laid eggs at least once. (They are together for almost 5 years now, I bought them when they were 2 months old)You need to opt for DNA analysis to make sure whether your lovebirds are male or female, mate.
How in the hell would you have found they're both females if you hadn't done that ?!!!...Weird!
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