Black-headed parrot


The black-headed parrot, also known as the black-headed caique, black-capped parrot or pallid parrot, is one of the four species in the genus Pionites of the family Psittacidae; the other species being Pionites leucogaster, Pionites xanthomerius, and Pionites xanthurus.
It is found in forest and nearby wooded habitats in the Amazon north of the Amazon River and west of the Ucayali River in Brazil, northern Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela. It is generally fairly common and occurs in many protected areas throughout its range.
It is most often found in pairs or small noisy flocks of up to 10 individuals, but sometimes up to 30. In the wild, they eat mostly flowers, pulp, and seeds and possibly insects.

Description

The black-headed parrot is a medium-small, short-tailed parrot with a black crown, yellow to orange head, whitish belly, yellow thighs and crissum, green back, wings and upper tail, blue primaries, and greyish-black bill and feet. The white breast feathers of wild caiques are often stained a chestnut brown colour. This may be tannin staining, as result of their particular affinity for bathing by rubbing their bodies against wet leaves and other plant matter.
Male and female birds have identical plumage.

Subspecies

There are two subspecies of the black-headed parrot. They hybridize freely and individuals showing some level of intermediacy in color are common:
Juveniles of both subspecies are strongly tinged yellow below.

Aviculture

Black-headed parrots are popular in aviculture.
The only ways to determine gender of an individual black-headed parrot are surgical sexing and DNA sexing. DNA sexing is safer for the bird than surgical sexing.
Black-headed parrots are playful and energetic pets. They need a large cage with lots of toys and perches. Cage minimum should be 24" L X 24" W X 36" H, though the larger the better. Maximum bar spacing is 1".
The black-headed parrot can have a tendency to bite, so owners may need to set boundaries early on. However, potential owners should prepare for a bird that uses its beak more often than other parrot species.
Some Black-headed parrots will poorly mimic human speech. However they more commonly mimic other surrounding sounds, such as alarm clocks, smoke detectors, microwave-oven beeps, laughs, car alarms, and whistles. In addition, caiques will combine sounds they have picked up to make new ones.