Breeds Of Birds

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Hyacinth Macaw

DESCRIPTION 39 1/2 inches (100cm), the largest living parrot, now rare and expensive. Body deep blue-purple accented by yellow eye ring and bold yellow along mandible bottom. Greyish beak exceptionally strong, able to exert 300 pounds (136kg) of biting pressure per square inch. Female usually smaller.
NATURAL DISTRIBUTION Central and southern Brazil, western Bolivia and northeast Paraguay.
HABITAT Hyacinth Macaw likes highlands, in palm forests, near rivers and lakes, in swamps, usually in pairs or small family groups.
DIET Hyacinth Macaw eats palm nuts, fruit and snails, also sunflower seed kernels, corn ears and fruit, occasionally a bone and cooked meat.
SPECIAL NEEDS Particularly strong cage or aviary; climbing tree if in house. Replace perches regularly. Do not keep on chain or ring.
CAGE LIFE When screeches, circles overhead with tail streaming, then settles in treetops. Especially close pair bonding and tame with trusted people. Lays 2 to 3 eggs, incubation 28 days, fledging 100 to 120 days.

Masked Lovebird

DESCRIPTION 51/2 to 6 inches (14 to 15.5cm). Dark brown head, yellow collar and breast, yellow-orange throat and chest yellow, body green, blue rump and tail, which has black and red band near ends on outer feathers. Brown eyes, red bill, grey legs. Immatures duller with black on beak. Females •weigh more than males. Blue mutation also available.

NATURAL DISTRIBUTION Northern Tanzania; introduced into Kenya.

HABITAT Nomadic. Grassy prairies with some trees. Nests in abandoned nests, breeds in 23/4 inch (7cm) space between tiles of roof and boarding underneath. Broods in colonies. Visits corn and millet fields.
DIET Cereal seeds, sunflower and safflower seeds, grain mixes, green food and fruit.
SPECIAL NEEDS Pairs. Cage with sleeping box and shallow bathing dishes. Free, supervised flight in house. Susceptible to frost, gnaws fresh branches for building.
CAGE LIFE Attractive and quiet. Distinctive coloration. Male scratches its head with feet before mating, female lines nests. Provide more boxes than pairs, 19% X 10 inches (50 X 25cm). Lays 3 to 6 eggs, incubation 21 to 23 days, fledging 40 to 46 days.

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