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Monk Parakeet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Monk Parakeet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Monk Parakeet
Wild Myiopsitta monachus monachus in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Wild Myiopsitta monachus monachus in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Subclass: Neornithes
Infraclass: Neognathae
Superorder: Neoaves
Order: Psittaciformes
Family: Psittacidae
Subfamily: Psittacinae (but see text)
Tribe: Arini (but see text)
Genus: Myiopsitta
Bonaparte, 1854
Species: M. monachus
Binomial name
Myiopsitta monachus
(Boddaert, 1783)
Subspecies

2-4, see text

Synonyms

Psittacus monachus Boddaert, 1783
Bolborrhynchus luchsi Finsch, 1868
Myiopsitta luchsi (Finsch, 1868)
but see text

The Monk Parakeet or Quaker Parrot (Myiopsitta monachus) is a species of parrot, the only member of the monotypic genus Myiopsitta. It originates from the temperate to subtropical areas of Argentina and the surrounding countries in South America. Self-sustaining feral populations occur in many places, mainly in North America and Europe.

Contents

[edit] Description

Female pet Monk Parakeet
Female pet Monk Parakeet

The nominate subspecies of this parakeet is 29 cm long on average, with a 48 cm wingspan, and weighs 100 g. Females tend to be 10-20% smaller. It has bright green upperparts. The forehead and breast are pale grey 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.[1]

Domestic breeds in colors other than the natural plumage have been produced. These include birds with white, blue, and yellow in place of green. As such coloration provides less camouflage, feral birds are usually of wild-type coloration.

[edit] Systematics and taxonomy

Myiopsitta monachus is presently the only unequivocally accepted member of the genus Myiopsitta. However, it seems that the Cliff Parakeet (see below) will eventually be recognized as a species again, as it has been on-again-off-again since it was first described in 1868.[2] It is presently included with the Monk Parakeet because there is too little up-to-date research on which an authoritative taxonomic decision could be based. The AOU for example has deferred recognizing the Cliff Parakeet as distinct "because of insufficient published data".[3]

Consequently, there are four subspecies presently recognized:[1]

The largest subspecies
Smaller than monachus, wings more prominently blue, grey of head darker.
Essentially identical to calida but supposedly less yellow below and brighter overall.
Smaller, with clearer plumage pattern: no scalloping on breast, underparts brighter yellow, underwing lighter. Base of maxilla dark.

The first three subspecies' ranges meet in the general area of Paraguay, and there they are insufficiently delimited. The distinctness and delimitation of calita and cotorra especially requires further study. As regards the Cliff Parakeet, it appears as if its altitudinal range does not overlap with that of calita/cotorra and that it is thus entirely - but just barely - allopatric.[4]

Like the other Neotropical parrots, the Monk Parakeet is usually placed in the tribe Arini, which might warrant elevation to subfamily rank as 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 is split.

[edit] Ecology and behavior

Nests in gum trees, Málaga, Spain.
Nests in gum trees, Málaga, Spain.

The Monk Parakeet is globally very common,[5] and even the rather localized Cliff Parakeet is generally common.[2] 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 there is small ecological competition from other species. The Cliff Parakeet occasionally plunders maize fields but it is apparently not considered a major pest as there is no serious persecution.[2]

The Monk Parakeet is the only parrot that builds a stick nest, in a tree or on a man-made structure, rather than using a hole in a tree. This gregarious species 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 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, ducks such as the Speckled Teal and even mammals. Their 5-12 eggs hatch in about 24 days.

The Cliff Parakeet, as its name implies, rather nests in cliff crevices. This taxon rarely builds communal nests, but individual pairs still prefer to nest in close association.[2]

Unusually for a parrot, Monk Parakeet pairs occasionally have helper individuals, often a grown offspring, which assists with feeding the young (see kin selection).

The lifespan of Monk Parakeets has been quoted to be from 15-20 years,[6] to 25-30 years;[7] the former might refer to average lifespans in captivity and/or in the wild, while the latter is in the range of maximum lifespans recorded for parakeets.

[edit] As pets

Tame Quaker Parrot taking off
Tame Quaker Parrot taking off

Monk Parakeets are highly intelligent, social birds. Those kept as pets routinely develop large vocabularies. They are able to learn scores of words and phrases.[8] This species is considered especially adept at learning.[citation needed]

[edit] As an introduced species

Monk Parakeet in San Juan, Puerto Rico
Monk Parakeet in San Juan, Puerto Rico

Self-sustaining feral populations have been recorded in several US states and various countries of Europe (namely Spain), as well as in Brazil, Israel, Bermuda, Puerto Rico and Japan. As it is an open woodlands species, it adapts readily to urban areas.

In areas where they have been introduced, some fear that they will harm crops and native species. Evidence of harm caused by feral colonies is disputed, and many people oppose killing this charismatic bird, but there have been local bans and eradication programs in some areas of the USA. Outside the USA, 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.

It was found that feral populations are often descended from very small founder populations. Being as social and intelligent as they are, Monk Parakeets will develop some cultural traditions, namely vocal dialects that differ between groups. In populations descended from a large number of birds, a range of "dialects" will exist. 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 less than three different "dialects" occur among the feral Monk Parrots of the Milford, Connecticut metropolitan area.[9]

Brazil
The species has in recent years expanded its range in Brazil, where there is now a self-sustaining population 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 - as well as in the vicinity of the neighboring domestic flight terminal, the Santos Dumont Airport.

United States of America
Considerable numbers of Monk Parakeet were imported to the United States in the late 1960s as a pet. 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. There are now thought to be approximately 100,000 in Florida alone.

As one of the few temperate-zone parrots, the Monk Parakeet is more able than most to survive cold climates, and colonies exist as far north as New York City, Chicago, Cincinnati, coastal Rhode Island and Connecticut, and southwestern Washington. This hardiness makes this species second only to the Rose-ringed Parakeet amongst parrots as a successful introduced species.

In addition they have found a home in Brooklyn, New York after an accidental release decades ago of what appears black-market birds.[10] Within Green-Wood Cemetery, the grounds crew initially tried to destroy the unsightly nests at the entrance gate, they no longer do so, because the presence of the parrots has reduced the number of pigeons nesting within it. 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). Oddly then, the Monk Parakeets are in effect preserving this historic structure. Brooklyn College, on the other hand, has a Monk Parakeet as an "unofficial" mascot in reference to the colony of the species that lives in its campus grounds. It it featured on the masthead of the student magazine.

Due to its invasiveness, a number of states outlaw either importation, sale, release, or mere possession of a monk parakeet.[11]

Spain
Monk Parakeets can be seen in Madrid, Barcelona, Cadiz, Valencia, Malaga, and the Canary Islands. In Madrid, they especially frequent the Ciudad Universitaria (university campus). 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 Truetta in Poble Nou.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Collar (1997a,b), Juniper & Parr (1998)
  2. ^ a b c d e Collar (1997b)
  3. ^ SACC (2008)
  4. ^ a b Juniper & Parr (1998)
  5. ^ BLI (2007)
  6. ^ Fasbach (2001)
  7. ^ Kamuda (1998)
  8. ^ The Vocabulary of a Quaker Parrot. Retrieved 2008-JAN-12.
  9. ^ Buhrmann-Deever et al. (2007)
  10. ^ Powell (2006)
  11. ^ QIC (2004)

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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