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MONK PARAKEET
Myiopsitta monachus |
SEASONAL OCCURRENCE: The Monk Parakeet occupies its stick nest the year around and generally does not wander far from it. These parakeets are sometimes seen in winter roosts of grackles. Egg laying in North America generally occurs from April to July and a second clutch may be laid in early September. In Argentina, the usual clutch is 5-8 eggs which are incubated for 24 days. Young birds start leaving the nest at about 49 days after hatching and most remain with their parents until about 3 months old (Spreyer and Bucher 1998). BREEDING HABITAT. The Monk Parakeet is an urban dweller. It feeds on fruit and grains that occur in the suburbs and wetlands. It builds its communal roost and breeding nest out of green, thorny sticks and other materials, attached to utility structures, high signs and tall trees. One nest measuring 1.2 by 2 m (4x6 ft)), contained seven compartments and housed 13 Monk Parakeets (Neidermyer and Hickey 1977). Most nests are smaller. These birds often nest along small streams and other wetlands. Water pumping stations are a favorite site. STATUS: The Monk Parakeet is an introduced exotic. It is not widespread in Texas, but is locally common and slow to expand away from its stick nest colony into new territories. In the early 21st century, it is very locally common in some metropolitan areas in Texas. Most colonies are descended from escaped cage birds, but some were deliberately released in Austin in the 1980s (Lockwood and Freeman 2004). The survival of Monk Parakeets in Texas may be dependent on the supply of bird seed in feeders , as is the case in some northern states, such as Illinois where winter feeding has been studied (Spreyer and Bucher 1998). Text by Harold H. Burgess (Posted with updates 2006) |
Literature
cited. Forshaw, J. M. 1977. Parrots of the world. Doubleday, New York. Lockwood, M. W. and B. Freeman. 2004. The TOS handbook of Texas birds. Texas A&M University Press, College Station. Spreyer, M. F. and E. H. Bucher. 1998. Monk Parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus). In The birds of North America, No. 322 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Birds of North America, Inc., Philadelphia, PA. |