Marin Independent Journal

Residents horrified at trapping of their beloved parrots

- By Livia Albeck-Ripka

For decades, residents of Temple City had learned to love their shrill avian neighbors expecting to be woken by a cacophony of squawks, and anticipati­ng their return at dusk to roost in the trees.

So it came as a shock last month when residents began to find some of the beloved red-crowned parrots dead, entangled in traps. Others found their feathers scattered along the road.

“I was just horrified,” said Norma Gonzalez, 53, a Temple City resident, noting that the birds a nonnative species whose population exploded around the 1970s and `80s, possibly after pet parrots were released or escaped became emblematic of the city, about 15 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles.

“How can somebody do this?” she said.

The mystery deepened on Oct. 27, when a video shared to TikTok appeared to show a man with a ponytail yanking a net containing a handful of screeching parrots from a tree in eastern Temple City, before hopping over a brick fence into a parking lot and getting into a white Ford sedan birds in hand.

Ceidy Cordova, 44, said she uploaded the footage after her husband caught the man on camera a day earlier. “It just broke my heart,” said Cordova, noting that she had reached out to Temple City officials and the San Gabriel Valley Humane Society to alert them.

“They're always there,” she said of the parrots, adding that her children would often open the windows at home to listen to their call. “Instead of hearing sirens or cars, it's nice to hear our birds.”

Detective Sgt. Richard Lewis of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department in Temple City said he first became aware of the parrot deaths late last month. Deputies found nets in trees along Rosemead

Boulevard, just north of Las Tunas Drive, and informed city officials, who removed them.

Under questionin­g by sheriff's deputies, the man in the TikTok video denied that he had put up the nets, Lewis said. He said the man told authoritie­s that he “saw a bird in the middle of the street; saw that the bird was alive; he picked it up, took it home, and as he was unwrapping the netting from the bird, the bird flew away.”

The man, who is not a resident of Temple City but lives nearby, told deputies he had also seen a dead parrot entangled in a net on a previous occasion and “disposed of the bird.” Authoritie­s

have not received any other informatio­n about who might have set the nets, Lewis said. “We have no idea.”

Temple City said it was working with the sheriff's department to investigat­e the matter, and that members of the public should come forward if they have informatio­n about who had set the traps.

The parrots, which are native to the forests of northeaste­rn Mexico, are considered endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature because of hunting, trapping and habitat loss. But in some U.S. cities, population­s of the birds are booming, said Simon Kiacz, an avian ecologist at Texas AM University who has studied why the parrots do so well in urban environmen­ts.

“What the parrots want is what the people want,” he said, referring to the palms, year-round fruiting trees, and nut and berryyield­ing plants that are found in the birds' favorite neighborho­ods in Florida, South Texas and California. “We've created these little habitats, or these little oases,” Kiacz said, noting that there are about 3,000 red-crowned parrots in Los Angeles County.

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