The illigal trade in African grey parrots is threatening the species in the wild
:
This Talking Bird Is Disappearing From the Wild
This Talking Bird Is Disappearing From the Wild
And the worst about this is is that the species is bred in large numbers in captivity so its not neccecary to import them at all !
That's what I was thinking. But according to the article, a lot of sellers don't want to wait for their young parrots to mature to breeding age...
Most African Greys these days end up in Asia and even though there are some confiscations in Europe the numbers are nothing like the pre-import ban ones. And wild-caught birds do not breed must faster than captive-born ones (actually the contrary is the case) before a wild-caught birds is settled in captivity will also take you some years. Plus wild-caught birds are often very nervous and shy. Many pairs will become nest-box hiders, which ensures you will barely see them. In the past it was price that pushed people towards wild-caught birds as they were a lot cheaper, but if you want to breed better to use captive born birds.
When I regularly read Cage and Aviary birds (a weekly British nespaper for bird keepers) in nearly every issue there was, in the lost and found section at least one lost African grey, I often wonderd if they were ever found, and if not why we didn't have flocks of them here and there, like the parakeets around Surrey and London.
Aren't most large parrots pretty slow to breed? It would probably take a while for an African grey population to be established, unless a bunch of them were released/escaped at once.
Yes i think your right TMO i believe that is how we have so large a population of ring necked parakeets in and around london, as they say a few were released together and obviuosly stayed together .