Home >> November, 2009

Wild and Pet Conures – Natural History and Captive Care – Part 1

Posted on: Thursday, November 19th, 2009 in: Bird Species Profiles, General Bird Care, bird behavior

Hello, Frank Indiviglio here.  The term “conure” includes a number of small to medium-sized parrots (i.e. genera Aratinga, Pyrrhura, Cyanoliseus and Nandayus) found from Mexico to southern South America.  While not necessarily closely related, aviculturists lump them together for convenience sake.  North America’s Carolina parakeet, closely related to Aratinga, would likely have been considered a [...]

Parrot Body Language – Puffed Feathers

Posted on: Tuesday, November 17th, 2009 in: Bird Health, General Bird Care, bird behavior

Hello, Frank Indiviglio here.  Parrots use a wide range of postures when communicating with one another and with their owners.  Understanding the meaning of your parrot’s body language will simplify interactions with your pet, and is also important in assessing its health.  Today we’ll look at puffed feathers – a behavior which can have several [...]

Bird Reproduction – How Natural Social Behaviors Affect Captive Breeding

Posted on: Thursday, November 12th, 2009 in: Baby Birds, Fun Stuff, General Bird Care, bird breeding

Hello, Frank Indiviglio here.  Bird breeding is rarely as simple as putting a male and female together and hoping for the best.  Even Budgerigars and others that been captive bred for thousands of generations remain influenced by ancestral behaviors.  Understanding this will greatly improve our success at keeping and breeding birds in captivity.
Social Behavior in [...]

Parrot Training Accidents – How Our Reactions May Confuse Parrots

Posted on: Tuesday, November 10th, 2009 in: Bird training

Hello, Frank Indiviglio here.  Birds of all types are surprisingly skilled at reading human body language, and making the connection between their body parts and ours (i.e., identifying eyes, mouth, etc.).  I’ve always been surprised by this, because we are such different beings than birds, and our facial features do not seem to line up [...]

Introducing Estrildid Finches – the Waxbills, Munias, Nuns and Grass Finches

Posted on: Thursday, November 5th, 2009 in: Bird Conservation, Bird Species Profiles, Bird diet, Field Notes and Observations on Birds, General Bird Care, Uncategorized, bird breeding

Hello, Frank Indiviglio here.  Among the130+ species of the family Estrildidae we find popular cage birds and highly endangered species.  Some, such as the gorgeously colored Gouldian Finch, are both – at once rare in the wild yet abundant in the pet trade.
Waxbills and their relatives are often the first finches aviculturists obtain after having [...]

Parrot Bonding – Will my Budgie be a More Responsive Pet if Kept Alone?

Posted on: Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009 in: Bird training, Fun Stuff, General Bird Care, Uncategorized

Hello, Frank Indiviglio here.  I’m often questioned on the pros and cons of keeping Budgerigars (parakeets) and other parrots singly as opposed to in pairs or groups.  Most folks are aware that parrots housed alone tend to form strong bonds to their owners, more so than birds that have others of their own kind to [...]