North Yorkshire Parrot Rescue!                      & Educational Pet Bird Club!                                              

                   North Yorkshire Parrot Rescue!                      & Educational Pet Bird Club!                                              

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Birds kept in cages

Birds kept in Cages

Birds kept in Cages

There Is No Such Thing as a ‘Cage Bird’ Written By PETA

There is no such thing as a “cage bird.” All caged birds were either captured or bred in captivity. In the wild, these beautiful beings are never alone. If they become separated from their flockmates for even a moment, they call wildly to them. They preen each other, fly together, play, and share egg-incubation duties. Many bird species mate for life and share parenting tasks. The evidence of their close companionship and concern for one another is plain to see.

Unfortunately for some birds, the very qualities that we find admirable and fascinating about them—their brilliant colours, speech capabilities, intelligence, playfulness, and loyalty—have made them the third most popular type of animal companion. It’s estimated that 40 million birds in the U.S alone are kept caged and often improperly cared for—bored, lonely, and a long way from their natural homes.

Many people buy birds on impulse and don’t have a clue how much time, money, and energy is needed to care for them on a daily basis. Birds are as messy and destructive as puppies—something irresponsible breeders and retailers often won’t explain to customers.

And unlike puppies, birds continue this behaviour for 15 to 90 years. Additionally, birds can be extremely loud and demanding and sometimes severely bite their caretakers. Because most customers aren’t prepared for an animal companion who is as curious, needy, and demanding as a 2-year-old child, countless birds spend their entire lives trapped inside a cage that’s too small in the corner of a living room, basement, or garage, unable to use or stretch their wings and deprived of the vital companionship of other birds.

Driven mad from boredom and loneliness, caged birds often become aggressive, neurotic, and self-destructive. They pull out their own feathers, mutilate their skin, incessantly bob their heads and pace back and forth, peck over and over again at cage bars, and shake or even collapse from anxiety. Even if a previously caged bird comes into a home in which he or she is allowed a rich, active life, this behaviour persists and is extremely difficult to extinguish.

Smuggling Is Common

Wild-caught parrots are also prime commodities in the multi billion-dollar illegal wildlife trade. Hardly a week goes by without another story of a bird smuggler who was caught with parrots in the air vents of his or her car, of small parrots being smuggled in jacket pockets, or of any of hundreds of other usually deadly schemes to import these valuable birds illegally. While many smugglers are caught, most are not, so thousands of uninspected—and frequently sick and terrified—birds enter the companion bird trade each year.

Wildlife smugling

Wildlife smugling

Wildlife smuggler found with 21 cockatoos crammed into plastic bottles

BY EARTH TOUCH NEWS MAY 07 2015

If it’s not pangolins in a freezer, it’s cockatoos in bottles. The horrors of the illegal wildlife trade were once again revealed this week as Indonesian police seized 21 critically endangered cockatoos found alive after being crammed into plastic water bottles destined for the exotic pet market.

https://www.earthtouchnews.com/environmental-crime/illegal-trade/wildlife-smuggler-found-with-21-cockatoos-crammed-into-plastic-bottles/

The Truth About Bird Suppliers

Just as there are puppy mills, there are now enormous bird factories where breeders warehouse thousands of parrots and other exotic birds and remove their offspring in order to sell them to pet stores. These birds are frequently confined to dirty, dimly lit cages, where they are unable to fully stretch their wings. There is no legislation to protect birds in the pet trade, and successful prosecution of cruel or negligent bird breeders is unlikely under most anti-cruelty laws.

A parrot-breeding operation in Washington State, USA—which a veterinarian described as a “concentration camp” and where, according to news sources, birds “lived in cold, wet, filthy conditions for years”— still remains open and continues to raise birds for the pet trade. The same lack of caring has been reported at breeding facilities across the country.

Disease Is Widespread

Bird-breeding factories often breed communicable diseases, too, from proventricular dilatation disease (PDD)—the symptoms of which include depression, weight loss, and constant or intermittent regurgitation—to papillomavirus infection, salmonellosis, giardiasis, and psittacine beak and feather disease. Sick birds can give humans or other pet birds chlamydiosis (psittacosis), salmonellosis, E. coli infections, tuberculosis, giardiasis, and other illnesses associated with bacteria and fungi.

When the Novelty Wears Off

When the birds who seemed so cute and lovable in pet stores turn out to be noisy, messy, and demanding of people’s attention, many are later abandoned, and few live out their natural life spans. About 85 percent of parrots are resold, given away, or abandoned within two years of being purchased. If they are ignored, they suffer in isolation and may become even noisier, more aggressive, or more despondent.

Caged companion birds are typically not native to the areas where they reside. They cannot be released simply by opening a window and letting them fly away (which would be considered a crime of abandonment in most places). Without the proper climate, food sources, and habitat, escaped or released captive birds become prey for free-roaming cats and wildlife or are doomed to suffer lingering deaths because of exposure, starvation, or injuries.

Responsible rescue groups, animal shelters, and sanctuaries can only place or care for a small percentage of these unwanted birds. To complicate matters further, some alleged “sanctuaries” are actually thinly disguised breeding colonies or hoarding situations in which birds are housed in extremely crowded conditions, receive minimal care and attention, and may even be sold back into the pet trade.

If you or a friend have a lot of time and resources and remain determined to have a bird companion, please adopt a homeless one from a shelter or rescue group, but only after fully researching their dietary, behavioural, and other needs. You are in for a great deal of work!

Buying parrots from breeders contributes to a horrible cycle of disease and abuse, so to appreciate birds without buying and caging them, consider creating your own backyard sanctuary.

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