![]() This tends to make breeding harder in an aviary situation, and they breed better if kept as single pairs in individual breeding boxes. These birds are a very close flock species and tend to all roost in the one nest if kept in a group. Development of these strains has taken several generations of the one Japanese family to perfect. For instance, one Japanese family may have developed all white birds with black wings, while another family may breed ginger birds with white heads etc. Over the centuries individual colour patterns have been developed. There is also a very attractive crested variety of the Bengalese. It is mostly accepted that these birds were first bred by the Japanese (Chinese?) some 500 years ago,and over the years, breeders have managed to breed lots of colour variations including fawn, chocolate brown, pied and etc. Two males will usually accept eggs, or even partly grown young without any hesitation. It has been found the best "pairing" for fostering is to use two males, this works better than either two females or a male and female pairing. They breed well and are good foster parents for other finch-like species. They are well adapted to captivity and do well in the company of humans. Nobody is quite certain which wild finches the Bengalese is descended from, but the Striated Finch and the White-rumped Munia are thought to have played a considereable role in their development. It is the most domesticated of the "finches" but its ancestry is the subject of debate. The Bengalese(Lonchura striata domestica), known in the United States as the Society Finch, is a not a naturally occurring species, but a fertile hybrid. Trinomial_authority = Taxobox_authority | author = Vieillot | date = 1817
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