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Masked Shining Parrot

( Prosopeia personata )

Also known as:
Masked Parrot, Masked Musk Parrot, Yellow-breasted Musk Parrot

Also known as:
Masked Parrot, Masked Musk Parrot, Yellow-breasted Musk Parrot

Type :
Geography:

DID YOU KNOW?

The Masked Shining Parrot, also called the Musk Parrot, gets its name from the musky scent it is associated with.

<p><em>Prosopeia</em></p>
Genus:

Prosopeia

<p><em>personata</em></p>
Species:

personata

Size:

47 cm (18.3 in)

Weight:

322 g (11.3 oz)

Subspecies including nominate:

one

Colour Adult:

Both adults black face; yellow down centre of breast, turning to orange on centre of abdomen; outer webs of primary feathers purple/blue; tail green washed with blue. Beak grey/black. Eye orange.

Colour Juvenile:

As in adults but with less extensive black on face. Beak horn-coloured and streaked with grey. Eye brown.

Call:

Harsh, grating notes while in flight, usually repeated. High-pitched similar notes rapidly repeated when alarmed. While perched cackling sounds; call notes loud and boisterous.

Xeno-canto Wildlife Sounds-Masked Shining Parrot

More Information:

Avibase

Content Sources:

CITES
BirdLife International
Cornell Lab of Ornithology/Birds of the World
A Guide to Parrots of the World, Juniper and Parr, 1998
Parrots of the World, Forshaw and Cooper, 1989.
Parrots of the World, Forshaw, 2006.
Lexicon of Parrots, Thomas Arndt.
Parrots: Their Care and Breeding, Low, 1986.

Captive Status:

Rarely found in aviculture.

Longevity:

Housing:

Walk-in enclosure 5 x 1 x 2 m (16.4 x 3.3 6.5 ft).

Diet:

Fruits such as: apple, pear, orange, cactus fruits, pomegranate, etc, forming about 30 percent of the diet; vegetables if taken; lory nectar from fruit pulp; rice and multigrain flakes; dextrose and low-fat yoghurt; sprouted pulses and seed; boiled maize; biscuits softened in nectar; brewer’s yeast.

Enrichment:

Supply fresh bird safe woods and branches. Enjoys bathing. Enjoys chewing buds and flowers off branches.

Nest Box Size:

Vertical box 12″ x 12″ x 40″ (30.5 cm x 30.5 cm x 101.6 cm).

Clutch Size:

Two

Fledging Age:

Hatch Weight:

Peak Weight:

Weaning Weight:

World Population:

40,000-100,000 mature individuals, slowly decreasing.

IUCN Red List Status:
Near Threatened

CITES Listing:
Appendix II

Threat Summary:

Not globally threatened. A BirdLife “restricted-range” species. Fairly common and very frequent in the Nausori Highlands in 1970. Is affected by deforestation and fragmentation. Forest loss likely approached 30% over the last 15 years, but has now stabilised at a slower rate.

Range:

Found on Viti Levu, Fiji Islands.

Habitat:

Found up to 1200 m (3936 ft) in mature forest and secondary growth areas, occasionally village gardens, farmland and mangroves. Also forest edge and in trees bordering waterways and ponds.

Wild Diet:

Takes fruits including Inocarpus fagiferus, mango, guava, figs and bananas; seeds, flowers, insects including caterpillars, seeds, berries and occasionally cultivated grain.

Ecology and Behaviour:

Occurs singly or in pairs, or outside breeding season in flocks up to 40 birds. Fly swiftly through the forest or above the canopy. Are noisy; their calls are one of the alarm calls of the forest that other animals rely on. Are timid to human approach.

Clutch and Egg Size:

2 or more rounded or broadly elliptical eggs, 38.0 x 30.0 mm (1.5 x 1.2 in).

Breeding Season:

July-September. Nest is in tree hollow.

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