City may ban feeding of parrots

Examiner

The Board of Supervisors will consider legislation that would prohibit people from feeding the parrots of Telegraph Hill.

SAN FRANCISCO - Feeding the famed wild parrots of Telegraph Hill could become illegal, because bird advocates are worried that the handouts jeopardize the flock’s health and safety while making them susceptible to bird-nappers.

During the last year and half, the popularity of feeding the colorful parrots at Ferry Park near the Embarcadero — where the birds roost in the trees — has increased. This surge in popularity worries Mark Bittner, who made the parrots world famous by writing “The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill” and co-starring in a documentary film of the same name. Read on…


Filed under: Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots
Scarlet Macaw Parrot May 11, 2007 @ 21:30

 

Polly Want a Hipster?

The wild parrots of Brooklyn explained By Kiera Butler

Monk Parakeets (Myiopsitta monachus) naturalized in New York, U.S.A. © Brooklynparrots.com

If you think you’ve seen a wild parrot in Brooklyn, don’t worry—you’re (probably) not crazy: The borough is home to a few hundred Quaker Parrots (also known as Monk Parakeets). No one knows for sure how these clever little green birds made their way to New York City, but some trace their arrival back to a shipment of pet-store parrots that escaped from Kennedy Airport in the late sixties. These days, they can be found at Brooklyn College, in the Greenwood Cemetery, and in a few other spots around the borough. Read on…


Filed under: Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots, Monk or Quaker parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus)
Scarlet Macaw Parrot April 26, 2007 @ 17:50

 

Macaws flying over Medellin, Colombia!

Today we received a wonderful video from Carlos Esteban Lara Vásquez who studies the macaws of Medellin for us. The video was gracefully made available by Carolina Gomez. In the video you can see 5 macaws enjoying some fruit in a tree (Spathodea campanulata) after which they take flight. From the flight pattern you could deduct that their is one pair of Scarlet macaws (Ara macao). These are the birds that fly parallel and synchronised to each other. They are more loosely followed by what might be their offspring. This supports the notion that the macaws have been successfully reproducing within the city habitat. The two other birds are more loosely associated. One of the birds is a green-winged macaw (Ara chloroptera). The first of its kind to be recorded in Medellin!


Filed under: City Parrots News, Conservation, Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots, Scarlet Macaw (Ara macao)
Scarlet Macaw Parrot April 18, 2007 @ 12:20

 

Spring for Ring-necked and Alexandrine Parakeets in Haarlem

Alexandrine parakeet (Psittacula eupatria) pair in Haarlem, The Netherlands.

Today we visited the parakeets of Haarlem (The Netherlands). Spring is in full swing for these birds and their breeding cycle well advanced.

There are two species of parakeet in Haarlem. The first and most numerous are the ubiquitous Ring-Necked Parakeets (Psittacula krameri). A species that is common in the Randstad area that joins The Netherlands mayor cities of Rotterdam, The Hague, Amsterdam, Haarlem and Utrecht in the west. These birds are joined by a closely related parakeet which can only be found wild in the Netherlands in Haarlem and Amsterdam: the Alexandrine Parakeet (Psittacula eupatria). Read on…


Filed under: Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots, Ring-Necked Parakeet (Psittacula krameri)
Scarlet Macaw Parrot April 15, 2007 @ 23:46

 

Nests removed but monk parakeets here to stay

KEN DIXON

Monk Parakeets sit in a nest under construction on a utility pole on Lordship’s Second Avenue. (Autumn Pinete/Connecticut Post)

The United Illuminating Co. has completed its spring-cleaning program, ripping down monk parakeet nests from nearly 70 utility poles in southwestern Connecticut.

But these tenacious green birds, South American invasives that have lived in colonies along Long Island Sound’s coast since the early 1970s, are already rebuilding their stick homes as they head into their egg-laying season. Read on…


Filed under: Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots, Monk or Quaker parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus)
Scarlet Macaw Parrot April 12, 2007 @ 08:50

 

Wild Parrots in Brooklyn

NEW YORK (AP) It’s an urban jungle, alright

All that work for nothing as these Monk  or Quaker parrots find their nests robbed. Photo curticy of Steve Baldwin brooklynparrots.com

Take a walk around the soccer field at Brooklyn College, and there, among the pigeons and starlings, you’ll see them - parrots. Yes, parrots. Bright green feathers, orange beaks, native-to-South-America parrots. Read on…


Filed under: Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots, Monk or Quaker parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus), Parrot News
Scarlet Macaw Parrot April 6, 2007 @ 16:37

 

The wild parrots of Redlands

ALEXANDRA HOLLANDER , For the Daily Facts

Hundreds of noisy, wild, green, parrots have returned to the tree tops of north Pomona where they roosted early Friday morning 12/29/06. (walter richard weis/staff photographer)

Redlands has been invaded.

The culprits are small, green and don’t speak our language. But don’t worry - these creatures aren’t aliens. They’re parrots. Most are members of the Amazona viridigenalis species. They have lived in Redlands for nearly 15 years, but their existence remains a mystery to the many of the city’s residents. Read on…


Filed under: Conservation, Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots
Scarlet Macaw Parrot April 5, 2007 @ 13:20

 

Suburban parakeet ‘pests’ face drastic cull

By Charles Clover, Environment Editor

Bird watch: Ring-necked parakeets (Psittacula krameri) are a regular sight in parts of London and the Home Counties.  These are at a roost Voorburg

A purge of the parakeets that have colonised parks and gardens in London, Surrey and Kent is being considered by the Government.

A study of the problems posed by 30,000 rose-ringed parakeets, originally from India and sub-Saharan Africa, has been commissioned by the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. Read on…


Filed under: Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots, Ring-Necked Parakeet (Psittacula krameri)
Scarlet Macaw Parrot March 22, 2007 @ 09:48

 

Chicago parrot researcher looks to local citizens for help

Chicago Chronicle by Katy Brandt

Monk Parakeets (Myiopsitta monachus) naturalized in Tenerife, Spain

Alien invaders exist in Chicago; it’s a proven fact. They are little and green, and for the past four decades they have surveyed human life in the city from on high. Read on…


Filed under: Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots, Monk or Quaker parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus)
Scarlet Macaw Parrot March 15, 2007 @ 00:34

 

Parakeet should be back in the wild says bird expert

By Alex Valk Northampton chronincle & Echo

Ring-necked parakeet (Psittacula krameri) in the Vondelpark, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

BIRD lovers across Northamptonshire have been spitting feathers over the caging of Abington Park’s ringneck parakeets.
The Chronicle & Echo received dozens of calls and emails yesterday from people angry about Northampton Borough Council’s move to capture the birds, which have become part of the scenery at the beauty spot. Read on…


Filed under: Feral, Naturalized and City Parrots, Ring-Necked Parakeet (Psittacula krameri)
Scarlet Macaw Parrot March 9, 2007 @ 10:54

 
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