Another beautiful Amazon! :cheer: So were the now extinct species.:angry:
Post edited by: kittykittykitty, at: 2010/01/31 02:43<br><br>Post edited by: kittykittykitty, at: 2010/01/31 02:58
Another week into the new year, time flies..This week we have a extra treat, our Amazon of the week plus 2 extinct amazons. Jayd
Our " Amazon of the Week is "The Red-necked Amazon" [no pun intended] or Dominican Blue-faced Amazon, also Bouquet's Amazon .
Size: 40cm (15.6 in) Adult Weight:620g (21.7 oz)
Range: Dominica, Lesser Antilles, West Indies.
Found from 300-800m (984-2624 ft) in the canopy of mountain rainforest, preferring Dacryodes excelsa stands. Formerly a regular visitor to coastal areas.
World Population:750-800
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http://www.parrots.org/index.php/encyclopedia/profile/red_necked_amazon/(Amazona arausiaca)
http://www.arkive.org/red-necked-amazon/amazona-arausiaca/image-G22634.
http://www.avianweb.com/redneckedamazonparrots.html
Guadeloupe Parrot (Amazona violacea)
Genus:Amazona
Species:
arausiaca
Family/Sub-family Psittacidae
Summary Amazona violacea, although not known from any specimens, was described in detail from Guadeloupe (to France) by, amongst others, Du Tertre in 1654 and 1667, Labat in 1742, and Brisson in 1760. It was named by Gmelin in 1789. In 1779 it was noted by Buffon to be very rare, and presumably became extinct soon after.
Ecology: Nothing is known, but it is likely to have been a forest species.
Threats: It was heavily hunted, and this presumably caused its extinction.![]()
The Martinique Amazon, Amazona martinicana, was a species of parrot in the Psittacidae family. It was endemic to Martinique. It became extinct due to habitat loss as Martinique was cleared for agriculture.[1] It has not been recorded since 1722.[1] A similar, also extinct parrot inhabited the island of Guadeloupe and may have been the same species.[1]Guadeloupe.It was a species of parrot in the Psittacidae family.Threats Hunting is likely to have caused its extinction.![]()
<br><br>Post edited by: Jayd, at: 2010/01/31 02:17
A Grey is a wild animal removed from the wild, bred to be companions. They are long removed from being able to take care of themselves but not so long as to forget at times they're still wild...so it's up to us to make sure we protect them. We're the reason they demand all this attention. We removed them from the wild. Jay
Another beautiful Amazon! :cheer: So were the now extinct species.:angry:
Post edited by: kittykittykitty, at: 2010/01/31 02:43<br><br>Post edited by: kittykittykitty, at: 2010/01/31 02:58
Hey Jay are the pictures of the Red-Necked Amazon of a male and female/adult and chick? Why is there such a color difference in the feathers, I guess is what I'm asking?
~~~~~~~~~~ Ana Grey ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Louie ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Sterling Gris ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Lily ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I think it's just the photo.. They're not dimorphic, most Amazons aren't. Good question...
Jayd
A Grey is a wild animal removed from the wild, bred to be companions. They are long removed from being able to take care of themselves but not so long as to forget at times they're still wild...so it's up to us to make sure we protect them. We're the reason they demand all this attention. We removed them from the wild. Jay
Thanks for the quick reply, Jay!!
~~~~~~~~~~ Ana Grey ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Louie ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Sterling Gris ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Lily ~~~~~~~~~~~~~