Leg Band???

apatrimo94

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Jun 15, 2010
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Bartleby-Pearl Cockatiel
S'mores-Albino Parakeet
Can anyone help me shine some light on Bartleby's leg band. I have no idea what it means. I've check some websites and they're not giving me the info I need. His leg band says AAA 1632. And I'm not too sure about his previous owner. My friend rescued him and gave him to me, and the owner didn't want his info given out, so I have no idea if he was from a pet store, aviary, or breeder. Thanks for any info you can give!
 

Birdamor

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Jun 14, 2010
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Sorry, AP, I can't shed any light on that band except for the fact that the breeder was not located in any of the states that require their two letter characteristic engraved on them and that the AAA is the breeder and the 1632 the individual bird's ID number.
 

parrotqueen

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I found a useful excerpt from Winged Wisdom's website, but I'm not sure it will help you with what you want to know.

TRACING A BIRD'S LEG BAND

Whether imported or domestic, open or closed banded, the leg band carries letters and numbers which identify the bird. Import bands are traceable. Domestic bands purchased from bird associations and some commercial vendors are also traceable.

Imported Birds

Imported birds are open banded at the quarantine stations before release. There are two types of quarantine stations, privately owned commercial import stations and USDA-owned and operated stations. The coding on the leg bands is different for each. The following information on import bands was printed in an article from Pet Business Magazine June, 1987 and may have changed since then.

USDA-owned and operated quarantine stations use bands with letters and three or four numbers. The letters refer to the name of the station:
  • Honolulu, HI - HH
    Key West, FL - T
    Miami, FL - 58A, 58B, 58C, 58D, 58E, 58F or USDA-F
    Newburgh, NY - NNY
The letters on the leg bands of USDA-regulated pet bird quarantine stations refer to location and are followed by three or four numbers:
  • Brownsville, TX - USDAB
    Honolulu, HI - USDAH
    Los Angeles, CA - USDAA
    Miami, FL - USDAM
    Mission, TX - USDAX ** for confiscated birds being put up for auction.
    Newburgh, NY - USDANNY
    San Ysidro, CA - USDAN
Privately owned commercial import stations use bands with an alphanumeric code - three letters followed by three numbers. The first letter signifies the state in which the station is located:


California - C,O
Florida - F
Hawaii - H
Illinois - I
Louisiana - L
Michigan - M
New York - N
Texas - T

The second letter denotes the quarantine station, while the third letter is part of the bird's ID number. For additional information regarding the numbers and letters on a bird's import band, call the USDA Administration Office Department of Agriculture, Fish, & Wildlife.

Domestic Birds

Domestic birds wear closed bands. Their traceability depends upon the source of the band. Many bird associations such as SPBE, AFA or species related organizations offer record keeping services and bands to their members. There are other band providers who provide both traceable and non-traceable bands. To trace a band which has an organization name engraved on it, you would contact the organization engraved on the band. Each organization will have its own procedures to trace the band.

For example the bands for SPBE include a breeder code (usually 3 letters), a number (bird identification number) and the year. The initials SPBE also appear - that makes them traceable to that particular organization.

Major band providers, such as L & M Leg Bands and Red Bird, make many of the bands for the organizations mentioned. They also make bands for others, such as individual breeders and aviaries.

L & M offers customers engraving which includes: a buyer id code (up to three characters such as letters, numbers or symbols); a consecutive series of numbers so each band has a unique number for record-keeping; their state or Canadian province abbreviation; and lastly, the year. With the exception of some states, this is all optional. L & M is not imprinted on their bands.

It is difficult, and sometimes impossible, to trace a band which does not have an organization code on it. The best course is to contact the major band manufacturers. They have thousands of customers, so it is unlikeley that the band buyer code would be unique. But they may be able to provide the names of a few breeders using this code, which is a starting point. The more information which has been engraved on the band, the better the chances of tracing it.

There are some states, such as Colorado or New Jersey, which have regulations which make tracing of bands easier. In Colorado the state assigns unique breeder codes that must appear on the bands, making them traceable. New Jersey requires band manufacturers to make sure that no one uses the same code twice and an 'NJ' in an oval must also appear on the bands. In California, budgies must have a traceable state registered closed band on in order to be sold, traded or bartered legally in the state.

Leg Bands are not the only means of identifying a bird and they definitely have their pros and cons. However, they are currently the method required by many governmental organizations. For this reason, it is important for owners to understand as much as they can about banding.
</B>
Here's the original link: Winged Wisdom Pet Bird Magazine - The ABC's Of Leg Bands - Identifying Birds
 
OP
apatrimo94

apatrimo94

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Thanks a lot, and I do believe that AAA is some sort of associtation, the best one I thought of in my head could be the American Association of Aviculture. But there's no such thing, so I'm still looking around!
 

Birdamor

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Jun 14, 2010
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No, I don't think so, if it was an association, it would also have the letters for the breeder on it and her band doesn't have any other letters so those three have to be the breeder's identification. But sooooo many people breed tiels that I would think it's virtually impossible for you to track that band back to its origin. You would have more luck if you could ask the previous owner where he/she bought it because pet stores usually buy from one or two large suppliers (most commonly bird mills in Florida) although they also buy from people who breed their pets.
 
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apatrimo94

apatrimo94

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Yeah but when I got it from the rescue my friend told me about, the previous owner didn't want his info or the bird's history shared. I mean I on't really care where he's from but I was just curious about it. Thanks for the help everybody!
 
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apatrimo94

apatrimo94

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Jun 15, 2010
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Hudson Valley, New York
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Bartleby-Pearl Cockatiel
S'mores-Albino Parakeet
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Yeah, it is a she because I've had her for 3 months now, and my friend told me that she saw Bartleby while working in the shelter and she told me that Bartleby's been there for a few months.
 

ESTILO

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Sep 5, 2010
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Hello Everybody

I was surfing the net trying to look for any type of information about my bird's leg band Which is JD FL 253, I have no idea which is the name of the breeder or company, if I am not mistaken I am pretty sure FL stand for FLORIDA but I can be wrong if anyone can help me find the information, name or wesite about this breeder please let me know.

God bless.
 

JawzX

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Aug 22, 2010
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Vermont
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8 year-old second-hand Alexandrine Parakeet Buddy (aka Baby, aka Ms. Prissy Beak)
I stumbled across this website while tying to find info about Ms. Prissy Beak's band:

parrot breeders and band numbers, tracking your bird band

seems to have a lot of info!

unfortunately, Buddy's band is "JH (sideways)FL 02(/sideways) 24" and this site says "JH changes evey year" but I can be reasonably sure she was hatched in Florida in 2002, which is backed up by what I know of her history.
 

charm87

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Sep 14, 2011
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Can anyone help, i've been trying to search this and can't find any answers, we got an african grey in july and the pet store wasn't much help and we want to know what her closed leg band mean, its FX 4083. I saw some of you saying abuout hatch years and stuff, but i can't figure this out!
Thanks!!:grey:
 

henpecked

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Dec 12, 2010
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Jake YNA 1970,Kia Panama amazon1975, both i removed from nest and left siblings, Forever Home to,Stacie (YN hen),Mickie (RLA male),Blinkie (YNA hen),Kong (Panama hen),Rescue Zons;Nitro,Echo,Rocky,Rub
FX on the band is for Florida Exotics,he's a broker /breeder and doesn't keep records or so he says.
 

mrhoagie

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Sep 25, 2011
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Purchased a YNA in 1995 at an auction. Open Leg band with ID of: CHA 418. I know "C" means California for entry from a private importer. The "H" means the quarantine station, but where is this in California? I have no idea what the last letter represents or the numbers. My main objective is to determine the age of Jubilee, the YNA. My understanding is imported birds halted approximately in 1993. Will this band information approximate age or year of import?
 

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