ParrotScience.com
Learn about your pet parrot!
Archive for January, 2008
January 21, 2008 at 7:23 am · Filed under News
A Middletown couple are offering a $1,000 reward for information leading to the return of a lost parrot.
“We lost him about three years ago to the day, and we believe he’s still in the area,” Aurelia Ward of Middletown Village said earlier this month. “He’s a very special part of this family, and we have never stopped looking for him. … He’s my first parrot.”
She and her husband, Kennon, believe — and hope — their people-friendly bird — named Galen — talked to someone who took him in, but will return him if they know he is missed.
They ask anyone with information on his whereabouts to call a toll-free number, (877) 263-0285. More details here.
January 18, 2008 at 6:08 am · Filed under News
PetSmart has suspended bird sales in more than 700 stores after some tested positive for a bacterial infection.
Random tests revealed a small percentage of visit here for more details.
January 17, 2008 at 5:48 am · Filed under News
THE RSPCA is urging the public to come forward with any information they might have about the shooting deaths of cockatoos at Caringbah.
The call follows the discovery of a wounded cockatoo in a backyard in Le Hane Plaza, Caringbah, on January 4. The cocky had been shot in the chest by a slug gun.
The RSPCA is now investigating.
RSPCA inspector Ainslie Lund said the bird had suffered before it died.
“A post-mortem showed the slug from the gun entered the front of the bird, pierced its bowel and lodged in its back,” she said. More details here.
January 14, 2008 at 8:10 am · Filed under News
MONTICELLO, Ind. — A woman whose home was swamped by Tuesday’s flooding says she’s thankful that neighbors saved her parrot, which nearly drowned after rescuers refused to let her bring the bird onto their boat.
Claudia Shown’s 6-month-old African grey parrot, Mo Jo, was eventually rescued Tuesday by two neighbors who found the bird trembling in its cage, half of which was under water.
“If they hadn’t got him, he would have drowned,” Shown said Friday.
She was preparing to leave her home Tuesday morning after Lake Freeman began flooding following torrential rains. She had readied Mo Jo as well, putting him in a small traveling cage, but when a rescue boat arrived, a rescuer wouldn’t let Shown take the bird with her.
“The rescue worker made me put him back in his big cage,” she said. For more details visit here
January 11, 2008 at 8:55 am · Filed under News
PARROT experts say an aviary breeding program intended to save one of Australia’s rarest birds has ended in disaster, with the Norfolk Island parakeet teetering on the brink of extinction.
Some of the last surviving parakeets died after being caught for breeding in aviaries on Norfolk Island. While authorities claim the program was successful and that the wild parakeet population had ballooned to more than 200, experts believe the real figure could be fewer than 20.
The Norfolk Island parakeet is found only on the small Pacific island, an Australian territory.
A National Parks and Wildlife Service captive breeding program began in the 1980s after surveys put the population at between 16 and 30.
The plan was to hatch and raise young birds for release back into the wild, but no parakeets have been released. At the same time, at least 11 captive birds have died.
Leading parrot expert Joe Forshaw, who initiated the program but is now retired, said he was dismayed at its failure.
“They had no qualified aviculturalists working with this and that’s why it’s a disaster.” Dr Forshaw said that during a visit to the island last month, he conducted surveys for wild parrots. “I believe there are fewer birds now than in a 1978 census that we did,” he said.
“There are supposed to be more than 200 but there is nothing to support that. The surveys have not been done.” Dr Forshaw said the nestlings of some of the few surviving wild birds were suffering from a potentially fatal beak and feather disease.
Several of the birds that died in captivity were examined by New Zealand veterinarian Bryan Gartrell. For more information visit here.
« Previous entries ·
Next entries »