First captive breeding of the imperial parrot (Amazona imperialis) Article

Reillo, PR, Durand, S, Burton, M. (2011). First captive breeding of the imperial parrot (Amazona imperialis) . 30(3), 328-341. 10.1002/zoo.20374

cited authors

  • Reillo, PR; Durand, S; Burton, M

authors

abstract

  • We describe the rearing and development of the first imperial parrot (Amazona imperialis) hatched and raised in captivity. A single egg was hen-incubated for 28 days, and the chick was parent-fed for ~14 days, after which it was removed for hand-rearing. Similar to wild, parent-reared imperial nestlings, the chick developed fully within 12 weeks, weaning at 540g body weight. Endangered and endemic to Dominica, the imperial is a vital flagship for oceanic rainforest conservation. Chronicling the neonatal development of A. imperialis helps illuminate the natural history of this enigmatic species, whose secretive nesting habits and low population density have frustrated a detailed understanding of its ecology and reproduction. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

publication date

  • May 1, 2011

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 328

end page

  • 341

volume

  • 30

issue

  • 3