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Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet

The Rose-ringed Parakeet (Psittacula krameri), also known as the Ring-necked Parakeet, is a gregarious tropical Afro-Asian parakeet species that has an extremely large range.

The Rose-ringed Parakeet is sexually dimorphic. The adult male sports a red or black neck ring and the hen and immature birds of both sexes either show no neck rings, or display shadow-like pale to dark grey neck rings. Both sexes have a distinctive green colour.

Dimorphic

adjective  chiefly Biology
occurring in or representing two distinct forms: in this sexually dimorphic species only the males have wings.

DERIVATIVES
dimorphism noun.

ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from Greek dimorphos (from di- ‘twice’ + morphe ‘form’)





Female VS Male

Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet
Female on the left hand side
Male on the right hand side
Djibouti - September 2018





Rose-ringed Parakeets measure on average 40 cm in length, including the tail feathers, a large portion of their total length. Their average single-wing length is about 15 to 17.5 cm.

In the wild, this is a noisy species with an unmistakable squawking call, and captive individuals can be taught to speak. It is herbivorous and not migratory.

Listen to the Rose-ringed Parakeet

Remarks from the Recordist

Recorded with my ZOOM H5 Handy Recorder. High Pass Filter in Audacity applied

2 birds sitting in a tree in Al Mamzar Beach Park and then takes off



Remarks from the Recordist

Recorded with my ZOOM H5 Handy Recorder. High Pass Filter in Audacity applied

Bird sitting in a tree and we can hear a weak answeer from a bird that approaches and landing in the same tree


www.xeno-canto.org

One of the few parrot species that have successfully adapted to living in disturbed habitats, it has withstood the onslaught of urbanisation and deforestation. As a popular pet species, escaped birds have colonised a number of cities around the world, including Northern and Western Europe.

Since the population appears to be increasing, the species was evaluated as being of least concern by the IUCN in 2012, but its popularity as a pet and unpopularity with farmers have reduced its numbers in some parts of its native range.

The genus name Psittacula is a diminutive of Latin psittacus, "parrot", and the specific krameri commemorates the Austrian naturalist Wilhelm Heinrich Kramer.

Distribution
Four subspecies are recognized, though they differ little:

African subspecies:


• African Rose-ringed Parakeet (P. k. krameri): western Africa in Guinea, Senegal, and southern Mauritania, east to western Uganda and southern Sudan, Egypt. Resident among the Nile valley and certainly Giza, it is sometimes seen on the north coast and Sinai. The African parakeet also started to breed in Israel in the 1980s and is considered an invasive species.

• Abyssinian Rose-ringed Parakeet (P. k. parvirostris): northwest Somalia, west across northern Ethiopia to Sennar district, Sudan

Asian subspecies:

• Indian Rose-ringed Parakeet (P. k. manillensis) originates from the southern Indian subcontinent and has feral and naturalized populations worldwide. In Australia, Great Britain (mainly around London), the United States, and other western countries, it is often referred to as the Indian ringneck parrot.

• Boreal Rose-ringed Parakeet (P. k. borealis) is distributed in Bangladesh, Pakistan, northern India and Nepal to central Burma; introduced populations are found worldwide.
The Indian subspecies are both larger than the African subspecies.

Phylogeny
A phylogenetic analysis using DNA (see Psittacula) showed that the Mauritius parakeet (Psittacula echo) is closely related to this species, and probably needs to be placed between the African and Asian subspecies. Consequently, this species is paraphyletic.

Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet

Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet
Range map from www.oiseaux.net - Ornithological Portal Oiseaux.net
www.oiseaux.net is one of those MUST visit pages if you're in to bird watching. You can find just about everything there

Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet
Original (wild) range
By DSWebb at en.wikipedia - Originally from en.wikipedia; description page is/was here.
Original uploader was DSWebb at en.wikipedia, Public Domain, Link


Ecology and behaviour

Diet
In the wild, Rose-ringed Parakeets usually feed on buds, fruits, vegetables, nuts, berries, and seeds. Wild flocks also fly several miles to forage in farmlands and orchards, causing extensive damage.

In India, they feed on cereal grains, and during winter also on pigeon peas. In Egypt during the spring, they feed on mulberry and in summer they feed on dates and nest inside palm trees and eat from sunflower and corn fields.

In captivity, Rose-ringed Parakeets will take a large variety of food and can be fed on a number of fruits, vegetables, pellets, seeds, and even small amounts of cooked meat for protein. Oils, salts, chocolate, alcohol, and other preservatives should be avoided.

Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet
Rose-ringed Parakeet / Ring-necked Parakeets feeding on stored grain


Reproduction
In north-west India, Indian Rose-ringed Parakeets form pairs from September to December. They do not have life mates and often breed with another partner during the following breeding season. During this cold season, they select and defend nest sites, thus avoiding competition for sites with other birds.

Feeding on winter pea crops provides the female with nutrients necessary for egg production. From April to June, they care for their young. Fledgings are ready to leave the nest before monsoon.

Aviculture
Rose-ringed Parakeets are popular as pets and they have a long history in aviculture. The ancient Greeks kept the Indian subspecies P. krameri manillensis, and the ancient Romans kept the African subspecies P. krameri krameri. Colour mutations of the Indian Rose-ringed Parakeet subspecies have become widely available in recent years.

Mimicry
Both males and females have the ability to mimic human speech. First, the bird listens to its surroundings, and then it copies the voice of the human speaker. Some people hand-raise Rose-ringed Parakeet chicks for this purpose. Such parrots then become quite tame and receptive to learning.

Listen to the Rose-ringed Parakeet mimic human speech.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Feral birds
A popular pet, the Rose-ringed Parakeet has been released in a wide range of cities around the world, giving it an environment with few predators where their preferred diet of seeds, nuts, fruits, and berries is available from suburban gardens and bird feeders. Its adaptations to cold winters in the Himalayan foothills allow it to easily withstand European winter conditions.

It has established feral populations in a number of European cities, South Africa and Japan. There are also apparently stable populations in the US (Florida, California and Hawaii) and small self-sustaining populations in Ankara (concentrated in parks), Tunis, Tripoli and Tehran (concentrated in the north side of the city).

Feral

adjective (especially of an animal) in a wild state, especially after escape from captivity or domestication: a feral cat.
• resembling a wild animal: a feral snarl.
ORIGIN early 17th cent.: from Latin fera ‘wild animal’ (from ferus ‘wild’)


It is also found throughout Lebanon, Israel, the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, and Oman. A small number of escaped birds are in Australia.

The European populations became established during the mid-to-late 20th century. There is a burgeoning population of feral parakeets in Great Britain which is centred around suburban London and the Home Counties of South-East England.

Parakeet numbers have been highest in the south-west of London, although the population has since spread rapidly, and large flocks of birds can be observed in places such as Crystal Palace Park, Battersea Park, Richmond Park, Wimbledon Common, Greenwich Park, and Hampstead Heath, as well as Surrey and Berkshire.

Feral parakeets have also been observed in Abbey Wood, Bostall Heath, Bostall Woods and Plumstead Common. The winter of 2006 had three separate roosts of about 6000 birds around London. A smaller population occurs around Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate, Kent.

There is also an established population to the North East of London in Essex at Loughton and Theydon Bois by Epping Forest.


Elsewhere in Britain, smaller feral populations have become established from time to time (e.g., at Sefton Park and Greenbank Park in Liverpool, Studland, Dorset, Kensington Gardens, and south Manchester). It has been suggested that feral parrots could endanger populations of native British birds, and that the Rose-ringed Parakeet could even be culled as a result.

A major agricultural pest in locations such as India, as of 2011 the Rose-ringed Parakeet population was growing rapidly, but is generally limited to urban areas in southern England

A Europe-wide count was hold in 2015 and found 85,120 Rose-ringed Parakeets in 10 European countries.

In the Netherlands, the feral population in the four largest urban areas (Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Utrecht and especially in The Hague) was estimated at 10,000 birds in 2010, almost double the number of birds estimated in 2004.

There also exists a feral population in Belgium, with as many as 5,000 pairs estimated in Brussels. These originate from an original population that was set free in 1974 by the owner of the Meli Zoo and Attraction Park near the Atomium who wanted to make Brussels more colourful.

In Germany, these birds are found along the Rhine in all major urban areas such as Cologne, Düsseldorf (about 800 birds), Bonn, Ludwigshafen, Heidelberg and Speyer, Wiesbaden and Mainz, and Worms.

Other populations are found around Paris, Rome — notably in the gardens of the Palatine Hill, the trees of the Trastevere and Janiculum and at Villa Borghese, in the Orto Botanico di Palermo in Palermo, in Genoa, in Barcelona and in Lisbon.

The specimens in these naturalized populations often represent intra-specific hybrids, originally between varying numbers (according to locality) of the subspecies manillensis, borealis[verification needed], and/or (to a lesser extent) krameri along with some inter-specific hybrids with naturalized Psittacula eupatria (Alexandrine Parakeet).

Where introduced, Rose-ringed Parakeets may affect native biodiversity and human economy and wellness.

In the United Kingdom and especially within London, parakeets face predation by native birds of prey and owls, including the Peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus), Eurasian hobby (F. subbuteo) and Tawny owl (Strix aluco).

There is a feral population of the birds in Japan. In the 1960s many Japanese people became pet owners for the first time and the parakeet was widely imported as a pet. Some escaped or were released and formed populations around the country. By the 1980s groups could be found in Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Niigata and Kyushu.

Some groups since died out, but as of 2009 there was a large population residing at the Tokyo Institute of Technology's main campus at Ookayama, along with small groups in Maebashi and Chiba city.

Conservation status
Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet
Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2013.2.
International Union for Conservation of Nature. Retrieved 26 November 2013.



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

www.birdforum.net


Sighted: (Date of first photo that I could use) 2 December 2018
Location: Al Mamzar Beach Park, Dubai, UAE


Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet
Rose-ringed Parakeet / Ring-necked Parakeet
Al Mamzar Beach Park, Dubai, UAE - 2 December 2018

Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet
Rose-ringed Parakeet / Ring-necked Parakeet
Al Mamzar Beach Park, Dubai, UAE - 2 December 2018

Rose-ringed Parakeet, Psittacula krameri, Ring-necked Parakeet
Rose-ringed Parakeet / Ring-necked Parakeet
Al Mamzar Beach Park, Dubai, UAE - 2 December 2018



PLEASE! If I have made any mistakes identifying any bird, PLEASE let me know on my guestbook



       
                  



                                       

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