Zebra Finch
Taeniopygia guttata
The zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) is a small estrildid finch native to Australia's arid and semi-arid grasslands, with related island forms from the Lesser Sundas and Timor region. It is one of the world's most common domesticated cage birds and a standard research species for vocal learning. Wild-type males have orange cheek patches, a barred throat and chest, chestnut flanks with white spots, and a red-orange bill; females are plainer with the same neat conical bill. Domestic strains include white, fawn, pied, black-cheeked, crested, and many other color or feather variations.
Zebra finches are active flock birds, so a long flight cage or planted aviary is more useful than a tall narrow cage. Stable care starts with companions, clean air, and dry sheltered roosting. Food is usually a small-seed mix supplemented with greens, sprouted seed, egg food during breeding, and a reliable calcium source. They nest readily in baskets or boxes, which means mixed-sex groups can overproduce unless nests and eggs are managed. Most are not hand-tame pets; their appeal is watching natural courtship, song, and flock behavior, with minimal handling and routine quarantine for new birds.