Crossbred
A crossbred blue-and-yellow macaw is a bird with Ara ararauna ancestry and parentage that includes another macaw species or an undocumented hybrid line. Blue-and-yellow macaws, also called blue-and-gold macaws, are large South American parrots with turquoise-blue upperparts, a golden chest and belly, a green forehead, and white facial skin marked by fine dark feather lines. In hybrids, these traits may be softened or combined with scarlet, green-winged, military, or other macaw features, so appearance alone does not prove parentage.
Care expectations should match a full-sized macaw, not the novelty of the cross. A large aviary or secure out-of-cage flight time is important, and indoor housing must stand up to a powerful beak. Daily enrichment and trained handling help reduce screaming, chewing, and defensive biting. Diet is usually based on quality formulated food with vegetables, some fruit, and appropriate nuts. Buyers and rescues should ask for hatch records and legal paperwork, while conservation breeding programs generally keep hybrids separate from pure species lines.
Colors: Normal Blue & Yellow