Monk parakeet
Monk parakeet | |
---|---|
At Transpantaneira, Poconé, Mato Grosso, Brazil | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Psittaciformes |
Family: | Psittacidae |
Genus: | Myiopsitta |
Species: | M. monachus
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Binomial name | |
Myiopsitta monachus (Boddaert, 1783)
| |
Subspecies | |
2–4, see text | |
Synonyms | |
Psittacus monachus (Boddaert, 1783) |
The monk parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus), also known as the monk parrot or Quaker parrot, is a species of true parrot in the family Psittacidae. It is a small, bright-green parrot with a greyish breast and greenish-yellow abdomen. Its average lifespan is approximately 15 years. It originates from the temperate to subtropical areas of South America. Self-sustaining feral populations occur in many places, mainly in areas of similar climate in North America and Europe.
Taxonomy
The monk parakeet was described by French polymath Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, in 1780 in his Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux.[2] The bird was also illustrated in a hand-coloured plate engraved by François-Nicolas Martinet in the Planches Enluminées D'Histoire Naturelle, which was produced under the supervision of Edme-Louis Daubenton to accompany Buffon's text.[3] Neither the plate caption nor Buffon's description included a scientific name, but in 1783, Dutch naturalist Pieter Boddaert coined the binomial name Psittacus monachus in his catalogue of the Planches Enluminées.[4] As Buffon did not specify the origin of his specimen, in 1937 the American ornithologist James Peters assigned the type location as Montevideo, Uruguay.[5] The monk parakeet is now placed in the genus Myiopsitta that was introduced by French naturalist Charles Lucien Bonaparte in 1854.[6][7] The genus name combines the Ancient Greek mus, muos meaning "mouse" and the Neo-Latin psitta meaning "parrot", alluding to the mouse-grey face and underparts. The specific epithet monachus is Late Latin for a "monk".[8]
The monk parakeet is one of two species in the genus Myiopsitta, the other being the cliff parakeet (Myiopsitta luchsi). The two parakeets were previously considered to be a single species. Due to morphological and behavioral differences, and geographical dissimilarities, the cliff parakeet has been elevated to species status.[7] The cliff parakeet's altitudinal range apparently does not overlap, so is thus entirely, but just barely, allopatric.[9] The American Ornithological Society has deferred recognizing the cliff parakeet as distinct "because of insufficient published data".[10]
Three subspecies are recognized:[11][9]
- M. m. monachus (Boddaert, 1783) is found in Argentina from southeastern Santiago del Estero Province throughout the Río Salado and lower Paraná basins to Buenos Aires Province and Uruguay; it is the largest subspecies.
- M. m. calita (Boddaert, 1783) is found in the Andean foothills up to 1,000 m above mean sea level, from southeastern Bolivia (Santa Cruz and Tarija departments) to Paraguay and northwestern Argentina, then west of the range of monachus, extending into the lowlands again in Río Negro and possibly Chubut provinces.
- Smaller than monachus, wings more prominently blue, gray of head darker.
- M. m. cotorra (Finsch, 1868) is found in southwestern Brazil (Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, possibly Rio Grande do Sul)[12] throughout the Río Paraguay and middle Paraná basins, as well as the Gran Chaco. It is essentially identical to M. m. calita, but reported as less yellow below and brighter overall.
The subspecies' ranges meet in the general area of Paraguay, and there they are insufficiently delimited. The distinctness and delimitation of M. m. calita and M. m. cotorra especially require further study.
Like the other Neotropical parrots, the monk parakeet is usually placed in the tribe Arini, which might warrant elevation to subfamily rank as the Arinae. M. monachus belongs to the long-tailed clade of these – macaws and conures, essentially, which would retain the name Arini/Arinae if this polyphyletic group were split.[citation needed]
Description
External audio | |
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Monk Parakeet bird call may be heard here, from xeno-canto.org, retrieved 1.08.2018 |
The nominate subspecies of this parrot is 29 cm (11 in) long on average, with a 48-centimetre (19 in) wingspan, and weighs 100 g (3.5 oz). Females tend to be 10–20% smaller, but can only be reliably sexed by DNA or feather testing. Monk parakeets display very subtle sexual dimorphism in the coloration of their crown and wing coverts, but this is not noticeable to the human eye.[13] It has bright-green upperparts. The forehead and breast are pale gray with darker scalloping and the rest of the underparts are very light-green to yellow. The remiges are dark blue, and the tail is long and tapering. The bill is orange. The call is a loud and throaty chape(-yee) or quak quaki quak-wi quarr, and screeches skveet.[11][9]
Domestic breeds in colors other than the natural plumage have been produced. These include birds with white, blue, and yellow in place of green.[citation needed] As such coloration provides less camouflage, feral birds are usually of wild-type coloration.[citation needed]
Behaviour and ecology
The monk parakeet and the cliff parrot are the only two parrot species that build a stick nest, in a tree or on a man-made structure, rather than using a hole in a tree. The monk parrot is a gregarious species which often breeds colonially, building a single large nest with separate entrances for each pair. In the wild, the colonies can become quite large, with pairs occupying separate "apartments" in composite nests that can reach the size of a small automobile. These nests can attract many other tenants, including birds of prey such as the spot-winged falconet (Spiziapteryx circumcincta), ducks such as the yellow-billed teal (Anas flavirostris), and even mammals. Their five to 12 white eggs hatch in about 24 days.
Unusually for a parrot, monk parakeet pairs occasionally have helper individuals, often grown offspring, which assist with feeding the young (see kin selection).[citation needed]
Monk parakeets have an average lifespan in their natural environment of 6 years.[14] However, birds in captivity can reach 10 - 20 years.[15][16]
Monk parakeets probably have individual voice prints that allow them to recognize each other, independently from the used call type.[17]
Native distribution
In its native range, the monk parakeet is very common.[1] In Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay, monk parakeets are regarded as major agricultural pests (as noted by Charles Darwin, among others). Their population explosion in South American rural areas seems to be associated with the expansion of eucalyptus forestry for paper pulp production, which offers the bird the opportunity to build protected nests in artificial forests where ecological competition from other species is limited.[11]
Invasive species
Feral populations have been recorded in several regions of Europe:[1]
- Spain[18][19]
- Canary Islands[19]
- Portugal[18][19]
- Azores[citation needed]
- Madeira[citation needed]
- Balearic Islands[18][19]
- Gibraltar[citation needed]
- France[18]
- Corsica[citation needed]
- Malta[citation needed]
- Cyprus[citation needed]
- Sardinia[19]
- Italy[18]
- Greece[19]
- Romania[citation needed]
- Channel Islands[citation needed]
- Great Britain[18]
- Ireland[citation needed]
- Belgium[18][19]
- Netherlands[19]
These populations are not equally large. It is estimated that monk parakeets in Spain account for more than 80% of Europe's feral population.[19] Monk parakeet populations have previously been reported in Denmark,[18] Germany,[18][20] Austria,[18] and Czechia,[18] but failed to establish; the relatively colder weather in these countries likely contributes to these failed invasions.[19]
Invasive populations also exist elsewhere in the world:
- Canada[citation needed]
- Mexico[21]
- Brazil[21]
- Chile[21]
- Israel[21]
- Bahamas[22]
- United States[23]
- Cayman Islands[21]
- Puerto Rico[24]
- Singapore[25]
Monk parakeets have previously escaped captivity in Japan, but failed to establish sustainable populations.[26] As it is an open-woodlands species, it adapts readily to urban areas.
In areas where they have been introduced, some fear they will harm crops and native species, while others dispute evidence of harm caused by feral colonies, and oppose exterminating these birds, but local bans and eradication programs exist in some areas of the U.S. Outside the U.S., introduced populations do not appear to raise similar controversy, presumably because of smaller numbers of birds, or because their settlement in urban areas does not pose a threat to agricultural production. The U.K. appears to have changed its view on its feral populations and the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs is planning to remove monk parakeets from the wild, as it believes that they threaten local wildlife and crops.[27]
Feral populations are often descended from very small founder populations. Being as social and intelligent as they are, monk parakeets develop some cultural traditions, namely vocal dialects that differ between groups. In populations descended from a large number of birds, a range of "dialects" exists. If the founder population is small, however, a process similar to genetic drift may occur if prominent founders vocalize in an unusual "dialect", with this particular way of vocalizing becoming established in the resulting feral colony. For example, no fewer than three different "dialects" occur among the feral monk parrots of the Milford, Connecticut, metropolitan area.[28]
Brazil
The species has in recent years expanded its range in Brazil, where a self-sustaining population occurs in the downtown area of Rio de Janeiro. Since this population occurs far from the bird's original range in Brazil – it was only found in the far south and southwest – it is most probably a consequence of escapees from the pet trade. In Rio de Janeiro, the bird can be easily seen at the Aterro do Flamengo gardens – where it nests on palm trees and feeds on their fruit; the Rio birds seem to favor nesting amid the leaves of coconut palm trees, and in the vicinity of the neighboring domestic flight terminal, the Santos Dumont Airport and in the gardens of Quinta da Boa Vista, where communal nests roughly 1 m in diameter have been seen.[29] In Santa Catarina State, probable escapees have been reported on occasion for quite some time, and a feral population seems to have established itself in Florianópolis early in the first decade of the 21st century when birds were observed feeding right next to the highway in the Rio Vermelho-Vargem Grande area.[12]
Mexico
The monk parakeet was first recorded in Mexico City in 1999.[30] Records exist from seven other locations, including the cities of Puebla, Morelia, Celaya, Oaxaca, Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Hermosillo, and Mexicali, and the mouth of the Loreto River in Baja California Sur.
Nesting populations are known in Mexico City and Oaxaca. A small but growing population has also been established in the southern part of the city of Puebla, Puebla, in the surroundings of the city's aviary, which they are known to visit frequently, and where they can often be seen clinging to the outer side of its mesh walls. No studies have been made to assess the impact they might have on the relict populations of green parakeets that live in the same area and other well-wooded zones of the city.
Following the ban on the trade of native parrot species, local traditional bird sellers have now switched to the monk parakeet as their staple parrot, and that might have increased the number of escapees. Sometimes, the head and breast feathers of monk parakeets are dyed yellow to deceive uninformed buyers, mimicking the endangered yellow-headed amazon. The presence of this species in seven geographically distant and independent locations in Mexico indicates that the source of these individuals is most likely the pet trade.[30]
United States
Thousands of monk parakeets were imported to the United States between the 1960s and the 1980s as pets.[31] Many escaped or were intentionally released, and populations were allowed to proliferate. By the early 1970s, M. monachus was established in seven states, and by 1995, it had spread to eight more. In Florida alone, estimates range from 150,000 to 500,000.[32] Austin, Dallas, and Houston, Texas, also have thriving monk parakeet populations.[33][34][35]
As one of the few temperate-zone parrots, the monk parakeet is able to survive cold climates (partly because they build communal nests about heat-producing electrical equipment atop utility poles), and colonies exist as far north as New York City, Chicago, Wisconsin, Cincinnati, Louisville, coastal Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and southwestern Washington. Edgewater, New Jersey has had a colony since 1980.[36] This hardiness makes this species second only to the rose-ringed parakeet among parrots as a successful introduced species.
New York State
In 2012, a pair of monk parakeets attempted nesting in Watervliet, New York, about 240 km (150 mi) north of New York City, near Albany, New York.[37] Prior to egg-laying, one bird was captured and the nest eventually was removed due to concerns that the nest built adjacent to an electrical transformer created a fire hazard.[38]
They have also found a home in Brooklyn, and Queens, New York, notably in Green-Wood Cemetery, after an accidental release at John F. Kennedy Airport in the 1960s.[39] The grounds crew initially tried to destroy the nests at the entrance gate, but no longer do so because the presence of the parrots has reduced the number of pigeons nesting within it.[citation needed] The management's decision was based on a comparative chemical analysis of pigeon feces (which destroy brownstone structures) and monk parakeet feces (which have no ill effect).[citation needed] Brooklyn College has a monk parakeet as an "unofficial" mascot in reference to the colony of the species that lives in its campus grounds. It is featured on the masthead of the student magazine.[citation needed] Several stories exist on the parakeets' introduction to the city, though their arrival is agreed to have been in the 1960s, following importation from Argentina.[40] They thrive in Brooklyn and Queens due to their preference for nesting in utility poles; populations have not expanded to Manhattan because of the borough's underground wiring.[40]
Chicago
The population in Chicago is estimated to be at 1,000 birds, with healthy colonies located in several of the city's parks.[41] Parrot origin theories include a University of Chicago experiment gone awry,[42] an overturned truck on its way to a pet store,[42] escaped birds from a holding pen at O'Hare Airport[41] or released / escaped pets.[41] According to University of Chicago ornithologist Dr. Stephen Pruett-Jones, "They got here through the pet trade and the pet trade really peaked in the mid- to late 1960s."[42]
The first documented parrot nest in Chicago dates to 1973.[42] The species continues to thrive despite several unusually harsh winters that occurred during the 1980s and in 2014.[41] Various attempts to remove them were made over the years, most of which were resisted by a group of Hyde Park residents, including Mayor Harold Washington.[43] The birds are generally welcomed in the city, especially by bird watchers, and were the subject of a 2012 ornithological study.[41]
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Two Quakers in a tree – Florida
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Monk parakeet nest in League City
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The large nest in the Green-Wood Cemetery gate
Europe
In Spain, monk parakeets can be seen in Madrid, Barcelona, Cadiz, Seville, Torremolinos, Málaga, Nerja, Valencia, Tarragona, Roquetas de Mar (Andalusia), Zaragoza, the Canary Islands, and Majorca in the Balearic Islands. They were first seen around 1975. In Madrid, they especially frequent the Ciudad Universitaria (Complutense University campus) and Casa de Campo park. They are a common sight in Barcelona parks, often as numerous as pigeons. They form substantial colonies in Parc de la Ciutadella, Parc de la Barceloneta, and in smaller city parks such as Jardins Josep Trueta in Poble Nou, with a colony as far north as Empuriabrava. They are more frequent in watered urban parks with grass areas and palm trees, near to a river or the sea. The monk parakeet, as an invasive species, has become a problem to local fauna such as pigeons and sparrows, but not yet so harmful to magpies. Parakeets have also caused trouble to agriculture near the cities. Spain has outlawed the possession, selling, breeding, and trafficking of monk parakeets since 2013.[44] Madrid has the greatest population of monk parakeets in Europe, with 10,800 parakeets as of June 2015.[45] A population estimate model projected the population of monk parakeets in Barcelona to be 5277 in 2015.[46] Between 2013 and 2021, the monk parakeet population in Seville increased from 1200 to 6300 individuals.[47]
In Greece, monk parakeets have established breeding colonies in the National Garden, Athens.[48]
The United Kingdom population in 2011 is believed to be around 150, in the Home Counties region. The Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs announced plans in 2011 to control them, countering the threat to infrastructure, crops, and native British wildlife by trapping and rehoming, removing nests, and shooting when necessary.[49]
Groups of monk parakeets can be found in the Belgian capital city Brussels and its surrounding areas. They have been living in the wild at least since the 1970s.[50]
Populations in Germany, Czech Republic, Austria, and Denmark were once reported, but these seem to have been extirpated. Other populations in the U.K., France, and the Netherlands have also similarly declined into extirpation.[50]
As pets
Monk parakeets are highly intelligent, social birds. Those kept as pets routinely develop vocabularies of scores of words and phrases.[51] Due to this early speaking ability, it is overtaking the cockatiel as the favorite bird to teach to talk.[citation needed] Another contributing factor to growing popularity is that this bird has a shorter lifespan and lower price[citation needed] than African grey parrots.
Because of monk parakeets' listing as an agricultural pest and invasive species, the U.S. states of California,[52] Colorado,[53] Georgia,[54] Kansas,[55] Kentucky,[56] Hawaii,[57] Maine,[58] New Jersey,[59] Pennsylvania,[60] Tennessee,[61] Wisconsin,[62] and Wyoming,[63] as well as Western Australia[64] outlaw their sale and ownership. In Connecticut, one can own monk parakeets, but cannot sell or breed them. In New York and Virginia, one can own monk parakeets with banding and registration. In Rhode Island, an exotic animal possession permit is required for ownership.[65] In Ohio, owning one is legal if the bird's flight feathers are clipped or it is incapable of free flight.[66]
-
Pet with blue mutation
-
Pets with yellow mutation
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- ^ "Fish and Wildlife in Captivity". Maine Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
- ^ Sobko, Katie (2017). "A spring ritual: Monk parakeet nests are removed". Bergen Record. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
- ^ 58 Pa. Code § 137.1
- ^ "1660-01-18". Rules of the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency (PDF). p. 03, 4b.
- ^ Wisconsin Administrative Code, Section NR 40 - Invasive Species Identification, Classification, and Control. https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/code/admin_code/nr/001/40
- ^ "Wildlife Possession and Importation Reference Table". Wyoming Game & Fish Department. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
- ^ "Parrot intercept a reminder to check import rules". Western Australia Department of Agriculture and Food. 8 October 2010. Archived from the original on 8 February 2013.
[...] a monk parakeet, a prohibited species which is not permitted to be imported into or kept in WA.
- ^ "Title 250, Chapter 40, Subchapter 05". Rhode Island Code of Regulations (PDF). p. 3.17 E. 2f.
- ^ "Are Quakers Legal in My State?". Quaker Information Center. 31 December 2004. Archived from the original on 8 October 2007. Retrieved 12 January 2008.
Further reading
- Bolognini, Marco (2021). Quaker Parrots: Caring - Breeding - Selection - Mutations. Italy. ISBN 979-8712199440.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Athan, Mattie Sue; Davey, JoAnn; Davey, Jon-Mark (2004). Parrots in the City: One Bird's Struggle for a Place on the Planet. Framingham, Massachusetts: Quaker Parakeet Society. ISBN 1-59113-563-X.
- Johnson, Steve A.; Logue, Sam (2009). "Monk Parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus)". Florida's Introduced Birds. University of Florida/IFAS.
- Field Guide to the Birds of North America. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society. 2002. ISBN 0-7922-6877-6.
- Sibley, David Allen (2000). The Sibley Guide to Birds. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-679-45122-6.
- "Monk Parakeet". All About Birds. Cornell University. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
External links
- Monk parakeet entry in the World Parrot Trust's Parrot Encyclopedia
- Guide to ageing and sexing (PDF) by Javier Blasco-Zumeta and Gerd-Michael Heinze
- Time lapse photography showing a pet monk parakeet constructing a nest on YouTube
Information on monk parakeets as introduced species
- Monk parakeet news from around the world
- Naturalized Parrots in the U.S.
- Monk parakeet factsheet from the University of Florida/IFAS
- BrooklynParrots.com, a website about monk parakeets in Brooklyn
- The Parakeet of City Streets, an article on introduced monk parakeets on 10000birds.com
Information on monk parakeets as pets
- Quaker Parakeet Society website
- The Quaker Parakeet Handbook, a guide to keeping monk parakeets as pets
- QuakerVille, a forum for monk parakeet owners