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Seasonal Behavior In Parrots


A couple of years ago, someone located here in the US asked me a great question: he wanted to know if his eclectus, a bird native to Australia, would display hormonal behaviors during the local spring season or by the one in its native land.

For those unaware, the seasons in the northern and southern hemispheres of our planet oppose each other. When it is summer in the north, it is winter in the south. Likewise with spring and fall. Spring actually occurs twice on our planet each year and it officially starts on September 22 in the southern hemisphere.

For parrot owners, no matter where we live, springtime means more than mild temperatures and blooming flowers. It means that our sweet companions become overrun by hormones which may cause them to act unpredictably and sometimes aggressively.

Birds do not become hormonal based on a calendar or schedule. It is the seasonal conditions that cause a bird to begin breeding behaviors. Towards the end of the winter solstice, light wave patterns begin to change and the daylight hours lengthen. As the season progresses, the climate becomes warmer, gentle rains fall and dormant plants come back to life meaning food will soon be abundant.

This combination of conditions each year, some seen only to birds, cause hormones to flood into the blood stream announcing that it is time to begin breeding. Wherever a parrot is when these conditions present themselves, regardless of its country of origin, will cause it to respond to physically.

Spring behaviors also happen in the fall

While spring represents the season in which breeding impulses are the most demanding, the fall also brings about a comparatively milder resurgence of similar behaviors.

Barbara, an Australian friend, has been complaining about her typically docile 10 year old greater sulphur crested cockatoo for the past couple of weeks. Dexter has been irritable and uncooperative during the day and has twice woken in the middle of the night. Fortunately, Dex is not a screamer, but even the quietest cockatoo sounds like a fire truck at 3 am.

Meanwhile, Janet, a Canadian friend, reports that her conure has taken up residence in a kitchen cabinet and will not come out “without a fight” – one that her fingers and wrists seem to be losing.

No matter where you are, you may be starting to notice some less than appreciated behaviors from your parrots. But even though the problems you face with your bird are culminating behaviorally, it is not a “behavior problem”. Nor is it a health issue.

While a well trained bird will be easier to manage under any circumstances, this is nature at work, and no amount of training can convince a hormone to stop its persistence in your bird’s body. Breeding season is a time of high stress for your bird, and as a result, it is stressful for us too – but it is a fact of life with birds.

What can I do to relieve the stress?

Spring hormones will always be a seasonal dilemma for bird owners. We can’t eliminate them, nor should we, as they are a big part of a bird’s mechanics and without them there would no featherless babies produced for us to love.

The most practical action is to reduce your bird’s level of hormones by eliminating those things in the environment that trigger them. Seasonal changes set the breeding season into motion, but the environment keeps it in motion.

  • Does your bird seek out hiding spots in your home? Are you met with aggression when you try to remove it?

  • Does your bird lunge and bite when you reach into the cage?

  • Does your bird LOVE cuddle time with you – maybe a little TOO much?

These are all situations in which hormones are escalated, sometimes resulting in aggression. It doesn’t take much for a bird to learn that biting is useful when it comes to controling your actions – bad habits picked up during these months can be powerful enough to outlast the season. Don’t let that happen!

The best way to keep your home under control during this season is to have an understanding of what your bird is going through and how it affects behavior.

Article from http://www.birdtricks.com/blog/seasonal-behavior-in-parrots/


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