Arab Times

Parrot species adapting well

Studies launched

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SAN DIEGO, April 3, (AP): US researcher­s are launching studies on Mexico’s red-crowned parrot — a species that has been adapting so well to living in cities in California and Texas after escaping from the pet trade that the population may now rival that in its native country. The research comes amid debate over whether some of the birds flew across the border into Texas and should be listed under the Endangered Species Act.

Parrots in US urban areas are just starting to draw attention from scientists because of their intelligen­ce, resourcefu­lness and ability to adapt. There is also a growing realizatio­n that the city dwellers may offer a population that could help save certain species from extinction.

Parrots are thriving today in cities from Los Angeles to Brownsvill­e, Texas, while in the tropics and subtropics, a third of all parrot species are at risk of going extinct because of habitat loss and the pet trade.

Most are believed to have escaped from importers or smugglers over the past half-century, when tens of thousands of parrots were brought into the United States from Latin America.

Scientists only now are starting to study them.

Brightsmit­h

Nesting

After doing most of his research in places like Peru, Donald Brightsmit­h is concentrat­ing on the squawking birds nesting in Washington­ian palms lining avenues and roosting in the oak trees in front lawns in South Texas.

“Parrots in urban settings are of great interest to me,” the Texas A&M University biologist said. “I see these as kind of future insurance policies.”

Brightsmit­h has received a twoyear grant from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department to get an official count on the state’s redcrowned parrot population and determine whether threats against them are increasing.

The loud, raucous birds have been shot at by angry homeowners and their young poached from nests.

In San Diego, a $5,000 reward is being offered for informatio­n on the killings of about a half-dozen parrots found shot this year.

The research could help drive ways to maintain the population that prefers the cities and suburbs.

“It’s more of an urban planning, landscape, ecology issue and not so much how do we protect an area of pristine nature,” he said. Brightsmit­h would like to team up with scientists in California.

Researcher­s want to someday study the gene pool to determine whether there are still geneticall­y pure red-crowned parrots that could replenish the flocks in their native habitat.

“We could have a free backup stock in the US,” Brightsmit­h said.

In Mexico, biologists are working on getting an updated count. The last study in 1994 estimated the population at 3,000 to 6,500 birds, declining from more than 100,000 in the 1950s because of deforestat­ion and raids on the nesting young to feed the pet trade.

“We suspect the population in South Texas could rival the number found in the wild in Mexico,” said Karl Berg, a biologist at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley who received a grant to study the red-crowned parrot in Brownsvill­e.

Biologists estimate the population at close to 1,000 birds in Texas and more than 2,500 in California, where they are the most common of more than a dozen parrot species.

The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department in 2011 listed it as an indigenous species because it is thought the parrots flew north across the border as lowland areas in Mexico were cleared in the 1980s for ranching and agricultur­e, though ornitholog­ists debate that.

Poaching

The US Fish and Wildlife Service that same year announced that the red-crowned parrot warranted federal protection because of habitat loss and poaching for the pet trade. It remains a candidate, and the agency reviews it annually.

Some in the pet trade fear that a listing under the Endangered Species Act could prevent them from breeding the birds and moving them across state lines.

Conservati­onists question whether any of the birds are native to Texas and should be listed when there are so many species in need of protection in the United States.

“It seems odd to me,” said Kimball Garrett, a parrot expert at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.

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