U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Asking for public help

Kiwibird

Well-known member
Jul 12, 2012
9,539
111
Parrots
1 BFA- Kiwi. Hatch circa 98', forever home with us Dec. 08'
Very sad. Wonder what kind of "farm" it was and what kind of pesticides, animal waste pits or diseases they could have ended up getting into? I hope the cause is identified quickly, especially if it was disease.
 

Birdman666

Well-known member
Sep 18, 2013
9,904
258
San Antonio, TX
Parrots
Presently have six Greenwing Macaw (17 yo), Red Fronted Macaw (12 yo), Red Lored Amazon (17 y.o.), Lilac Crowned Amazon (about 43 y.o.) and a Congo African Grey (11 y.o.)
Panama Amazon (1 Y.O.)
Well the poisoning theory sounds like the most plausible one...

They poison the mice/rats/other pests to get rid of them, without thinking about the consequences of what happens to "nature's clean up crew" the animals that eat other dead animals.

They eat the animals that have been poisoned, and consume the poison themselves. They die too...

It wouldn't be the first time.

Could be pesticide exposure, but... this sounds more likely.
 

Mimsy01

New member
Jul 7, 2014
512
1
Parrots
GCC-Foofany
European Starling-Zeki
BCC-Ellie House Sparrow-Napolean Parakeet-Bean
If you do research you will see that every year there are a ton of incidents where birds fall out of the sky dead. Sure some of those can be freak weather patterns that mess the flock up and cause them to fly into something. But most of the time it's due to poisons.

They don't usually get much publicity because frequently it will be starlings or house sparrows who are considered an invasive species, so no one cares, or considers it good riddance.

the problem with this is those are birds in HUGE flocks so that is why it's highly noticed. It may go unnoticed when it's just a couple eagles or other less invasive birds. Also predator birds will eat those poisoned birds and may die, but it may take quite sometime so it goes unconnected.

Hopefully they are able in this case to identify what has happened.
 

dhraiden

Member
Jul 14, 2015
603
23
Queens NY
Parrots
Green Cheek Conure (Mochi)
Gold Capped Conure (Mango)
It sounds like some sort of pesticide or poison entering their food chain is the most probable cause.
 

plumsmum2005

New member
Nov 18, 2015
5,330
94
England, UK
Parrots
Lou, Ruby, and Sonu.
Fly free Plum, my gorgeous boy.
Perhaps they ought to make the culprits swallow a sh*t load of the same stuff? (When they find them)
 

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