Helping the Cause of Macaws

Similar documents
The Tambopata Macaw Project: 2012 Update

CHAPTER ONE. Exploring the Woods

Effects of Diet, Migration, and Breeding on Clay Lick Use by Parrots in Southeastern Peru.

By Alwyn Evans Illustrated by Paul Ricketts

Learn more at LESSON TITLE: BRINGING UP BIRDY GRADE LEVEL: 2-3. TIME ALLOTMENT: One to two 45-minute class periods OVERVIEW:

Dinosaurs. Lesson 1 Amazing dinosaurs. 1 Talk about it What do you know about dinosaurs?

patch. The egg will be as snug and warm there as if it were in a sleeping bag. Penguin Chick By Betty Tatham Illustrated by Helen K.

MYSTERY OF THE SICKLE CLAW DINOSAUR

An Analysis of Macaw Conservation Strategies. at the Tambopata Research Center

Atlantic Puffins By Guy Belleranti

SAMPLE LLI RED SYSTEM BOOK. Intriguing Animals SERIES

INSTRUCTIONS BOOK Follow these steps to construct your Owl Minibook.

BIRDS AND FLIGHT. 1

Captive Versus Wild. My last few papers have been on the subject of wild-caught versus captive-bred

Australasian Grebes: Little Grebes big attitude! Images and text by Ian and Jill Brown

Year 6 English Reading Comprehension Time: 50 mins. English Reading Comprehension. Total: 30 marks

National Geographic Explorer. Lesson 1 Raising Raptors

PORTRAIT OF THE AMERICAN BALD EAGLE

November Creation. Teaching Aids Needed:

Gold Experience B2 Progress test 2

The Trumpet of the Swan by E.B.White Pages 15-18

ETHICS, RELIGIOUS CULTURE AND DIALOGUE

RED CAT READING. Leveled Reading Assessment

Endangered Birds. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

2009 Eagle Nest News from Duke Farms eagle nest Written by Larissa Smith, Assistant Biologist

Birds. Endangered Birds A Reading A Z Level M Leveled Book Word Count: 545 LEVELED BOOK M.

Lesson 4: Moo, Oink, Cluck

The Red Hen Ball. Move over, I have to fix my hat, said Charlotte. Hold your tail feathers, squawked Bernice. I m almost finished with my makeup.

Let s Learn About. Turkeys. With

MRDP. Innovations in village chicken farming Gugu Mbatha

The Missing Woodpecker

COUNTRY BASKETS & SPICES MONTHLY NEWSLETTER September / 2009 Number 7. Fall Herb Collecting

Parrot Husbandry. Lovebirds. Environment

Living Homegrown Podcast Episode #12 Choosing Your Backyard Chicken Breeds. Show Notes:

Akash and the Pigeons

Look Who s. Flying! by Claudia Burns and Dave Horton

Zoo Crew. A SmithSoniAn S national Zoo FAmily EduCAtion GuidE

Prince of Central Park

Fact Sheet 6. Breeding Cages

A. Write the words under the picture.

By Katherine Rawson. Illustrated by Sherry Rogers

Dinosaur! by David Orme. Perfection Learning

OSOLA THE DRAGON Hal Ames

Four Methods:Preparing to BreedChoosing the Eggs to IncubateLetting the Hen Hatch the EggsIncubating the Eggs Yourself

Right and next page: Brahma chicks with decent footfeathering, but with no fluff on the inner side of the legs and on the inner toes.

ì<(sk$m)=bdddid< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

LEVELED BOOK P Aesop s Fables. Retold by Julie Harding Illustrated by Maria Voris. Aesop s Fables

Hi there. I m Kelly Jean Kelly. Today on As It Is, we are talking about nature.

Meet Our Penguins. Amigo. Bee

Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills

the Greek words for Love + Bird = Lovebird.Lovebirds can be classified as aggressive birds to other birds as well as their own species.

4-H Small Animals. Birds Gerbils Hamsters Mice Reptiles

Parrots, Budgerigars and Cockatiels

Inferring #1 This diagram shows the beak of several different species of birds. Make observations about the beaks and answer the questions.

Feathered, But Not Ready for Takeoff

ISLE ROYALE WOLF MOOSE STUDY

ENGLISH ENTRANCE/SCHOLARSHIP EXAMINATION Section A: Reading ANSWER BOOKLET 25 minutes Name Candidate number Instructions to Candidates Write your name

This Coloring Book has been adapted for the Wildlife of the Table Rocks

Closer Reading For Deeper Learning

Tamim Ansary. Illustrations by Derrick Williams

Good Idea, Mother Nature!

Forpus passerinus (Green-rumped Parrotlet)

By Dmitri Allicock. Guyanese Online -

I spend a lot of time looking up.

Unit 3 The Tiger. 3A Introduction. 3B Song Lyrics. doze perform. brilliant capture. plunge predator. continent crew.

The Tambopata Macaw Project: Developing techniques to increase macaw reproductive rates

Conserving Birds in North America

How To Make Sure Your Parrot Gets Up To 12 Hours Of Play Time Every Day

Nadia Belerique & Sojourner Truth Parsons Don't tell me that flowers must die, I know

BEFORE Scarlet and military macaws received during the March confiscation

Piecing Together the Story of Dinosaurs from Fossils By Readworks

ISBN 13: ISBN 10: Library of Congress Number:

The Guinea Pig. Nose. Eye. Whiskers COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. Ear. Underbelly. Nail. Rump

it was a cold winter day, and MolLy was restless. She was hungry, and her stomach hurt.

Copyright 2015 ISBN Published by. United States of America

Dogs at Work. Visit for thousands of books and materials. A Reading A Z Level M Leveled Reader Word Count: 744

Bald Eagles in the Yukon. Wildlife in our backyard

Yellowjacket Habitat at Home

Nat Geo Notes for: How do Living Things Survive and Change?

Hatching Chicks in the Classroom

Report Samantha Donnellan. Pura Vida!

Birds THE BODY. attract =to pull towards. avoid =to keep away from. backbone =the row of connected bones that go down the middle of your back

The Awe-Inspiring Leatherback. South of Malaysia, a leatherback sea turtle glides beneath the surface of

Debra J. Housel, M.S. Ed. Publisher Mary D. Smith, M.S. Ed. Author

FALLing. into Poems. Name:

Eagle, Fly! An African Tale. retold by Christopher Gregorowski illustrated by Niki Daly

Back to basics - Accommodating birds in the laboratory setting

Grade 5. Practice Test. Invasion of the Pythons

From mountain to sea. A Survivor s Guide to Living with Urban Gulls

Hawaii s Forest. Concepts Competition Invasive Species How organisms affect other organisms in the same environment. HCPS III Benchmarks S.C.4.5.

Endangered Species Origami

Dewey Deer s Love Daisies Elizabeth L Hamilton

Bluebirds & Des Moines City Parks

Please initial and date as your child has completely mastered reading each column.

Education. ESL-Advance

1 Tracked Down. Copyright [first year of publication] Individual author and/or Walker Books Ltd. All rights reserved.

Pikas. Pikas, who live in rocky mountaintops, are not known to move across non-rocky areas or to

North Hudson s squirrel whisperer rescues orphaned babies

Loon Watch Supersize Me. Story and Photos by Donna Love. female loon kept trying to feed six-inch long fish to the newly hatched chick.

I sit in my room on a Friday night, at my computer. My mind wanders to the topic of

Transcription:

Helping the Cause of Macaws By Originally published in ScienceNews for Kids March 12, 2007 ScienceNews for Kids March 12, 2007 Deep in the steamy Peruvian jungle, a macaw spreads her brilliant scarlet feathers over her three squirming chicks. She pokes her great beak out the door of the wooden box where she has made her nest and waits for her mate to return with food. Fifty feet below, Jerome Hillaire and Karina Quinteros of the Tambopata Research Center look up from a laptop to admire the bird as she cocks her head at them. The computer s screen is showing live images of the macaw and her chicks, sent from a tiny camera that the researchers have tucked inside her nest. They hope that understanding how macaws live will help efforts to save the birds. Macaws normally nest in cavities in very large, old trees. At Tambopata, researchers hang artificial nests from big trees for the birds to use. Parrots in peril Like many other kinds of parrots in the wild, macaws are in trouble. People sometimes kill them for their beautiful feathers, or capture the chicks and sell them as pets. www.macawproject.org 1

Many parrots, such as this macaw, are endangered. More important, the macaws are losing their homes. These birds usually nest in natural cavities in old trees. These large trees are valuable for lumber, so they re often cut down, and the macaws are left with nowhere to lay their eggs. Fake nests So, researchers at Tambopata built artificial nests out of wood or pieces of plastic pipe. They hung the nests from trees and then watched to see whether the macaws would use them. The scientists were pleased to see that the birds seem to approve of the fake nests. The macaws used them year after year. Since that discovery, people have begun building similar artificial nests in other areas where macaws are struggling to survive. In addition to helping the birds, the fake nests make life easier for the researchers. They now have lots of subjects to observe near Tambopata. The squawking sounds of macaws fill the air around the research center. It s a parrot laboratory, because there are lots of birds, says Donald Brightsmith, Tambopata s research director. It s a very good place to learn how parrots work. Learning more about macaws Hillaire and Quinteros, for example, are trying to solve a puzzle about macaw chicks. Macaws often lay three or four eggs at a time, but only one or two of the hatchlings develop to maturity. The other chicks starve during infancy, even if the parents have plenty of food. Hillaire and Quinteros want to know why. They note how much time the mother macaw spends with her chicks, how often she feeds them, how often the chicks fight with each other, and how much food each chick gets. The third chick is going to die soon, Hillaire says, as he studies another live image on the computer screen. The first-born chick fills most of the screen, but off in the corner, a scrawny chick trembles. www.macawproject.org 2

It s kind of sad. You watch him day after day, and he fights and fights and fights, and he only gets a little food. He s wearing himself out with all that fighting. This macaw chick is about a month old. The researchers climbed up the tree and removed him from his nest in order to weigh him. His parents swooped down to attack the researchers while they did that! Cheeky chicos Early in the research center s history, scientists decided to try to save the third and fourth eggs and raise the chicks by hand. (The researchers call the young birds chicos, which means kids in Spanish.) Of the eggs they saved, 26 chicos grew into adult macaws. The birds now live free in the jungle. They ve found mates, and most have raised chicks of their own. But because the birds got used to humans, many like to come back and visit. They ll fly into the center s open-air dining room, march across the tables, and snatch food from people s plates. They can be lured with food to stand on someone s shoulder. They ll also steal shiny things such as watches or jewelry. www.macawproject.org 3

Researchers hand-raised some of the chicks that wouldn t have survived in their parents nests. These birds now live in the jungle, but like to come back for treats. The researchers stopped hand-raising chicks from the third and fourth eggs a dozen years ago. They didn t think it was a good idea to create partly tame parrots. What s more, the macaw population in the area was thriving, even though some chicks were not surviving. Tasty clay Macaws, which ordinarily mate for life, are often seen flying in pairs. Bird researchers like Tambopata because the area has so many macaws. The birds have a different reason for liking the place. Tambopata has an enormous clay lick, which is a place with a special kind of clay-rich dirt that the birds like to eat. This clay lick, which forms a 1,500-foot-long cliff, is the largest one known in the world. The researchers get up at 4 a.m. every day. They arrive at the clay lick before dawn to count how many birds show up. The smaller parrots, such as mealy parrots, are usually the first to fly around the lick, gabbling in high voices. Then other birds blue-headed parrots, chestnut-fronted macaws, www.macawproject.org 4

dusky-headed parakeets join in. Eventually, a pair of great scarlet macaws will soar overhead, slowly flapping their enormous wings. Finally, the birds pick a spot to land. They start scooping up dirt with their beaks. The birds use the clay lick most heavily during the breeding season. They feed clay to their chicks too. Macaws and other parrots in Tambopata like to eat dirt. The dirt contains special, salty clay that may help the birds get rid of toxins in their diets. The researchers think that the birds eat the clay because it contains salt, which the birds need in their diets. They also think the clay protects the birds against toxins in the seeds and fruit they eat. And the birds seem to enjoy eating the clay. It probably tastes good to them, says Brightsmith. Helping all parrots The knowledge gathered at Tambopata is helping parrots around the world. The artificial nests that the researchers have developed are being used to save macaws in immediate danger of extinction. These endangered birds include the great green macaw, which lives in Ecuador and Costa Rica. Brightsmith is working with the Brazilian government to develop a plan to protect Brazil s wild macaws. And what Tambopata researchers have learned about the diets of wild parrots is even helping improve commercial bird foods such as those you might feed a pet parrot. Brightsmith hopes that the center s work will help ensure that macaws continue to flash scarlet streaks through the Amazon jungle for centuries to come. www.macawproject.org 5