For today’s post, we’ll look at two groups of parrots, inevitably tied together through common association in zoos – the rainbow lorikeet, and the budgerigar. These, of course, are the birds most often seen in zoos for use in feeding aviaries. My experience with each species comes from non-AZA zoos, having worked with each species at one (different) facility.
I worked with the lorikeets first. We called them rainbow lorikeets, because that’s how they were all defined at the time, but in the years since the species has been carved up into several species, and we had some coconuts, sunsets, etc in our flock (along with a single red lory). The flock consisted of about thirty birds, housed in a fairly spacious aviary with an attached holding building (one of the few proper indoor holdings with a
For today’s post, we’ll look at two groups of parrots, inevitably tied together through common association in zoos – the rainbow lorikeet, and the budgerigar. These, of course, are the birds most often seen in zoos for use in feeding aviaries. My experience with each species comes from non-AZA zoos, having worked with each species at one (different) facility.
I worked with the lorikeets first. We called them rainbow lorikeets, because that’s how they were all defined at the time, but in the years since the species has been carved up into several species, and we had some coconuts, sunsets, etc in our flock (along with a single red lory). The flock consisted of about thirty birds, housed in a fairly spacious aviary with an attached holding building (one of the few proper indoor holdings with actual gas heating we had in the whole zoo). The outdoor aviary was grassy, with a gravel path forming a loop through it, lined with rope-and-post fencing to keep visitors on the path. There was a fair bit of perching, most of it lining the path and with distance and height in mind to keep the birds close to visitors.
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Every day, I would mix up a batch of the nectar – a powder stirred into warm water until it was the consistency of a somewhat thin smoothie. I have a very strong sweet tooth and am addicted to sugar, but I have to admit, I found the liquid almost nauseating in its sickly-sweet smell, and I think I would have sooner drunk bleach than the mixture... which I mentioned because many of my coworkers did take a shot of it... once (you yourselves, ZooChatters, have likely fed lorikeets at a zoo before, and may not have noticed the smell. It’s not nearly so strong when it’s in a small cup, as opposed to a huge pitcher). On days when we expected to be very busy, we’d water the mixture down a bit more to make it last longer throughout the day. The nectar was supplemented each day with chopped produce, sometimes mixed into the nectar, sometimes scattered around the yard.
Lorikeet management was focused around the feedings. The aviary was locked (but visible from the outside) and only open at feeding times. When we were at the busy open season, there were three half-hour public feedings a day. When possible on busy days, we tried to have two keepers present – one to sit at the entrance vestibule, take money, and dispense the cups and explain the rules, the other to watch the inside of the aviary and monitor interactions. Visitors were, I will say, fairly well behaved in the aviary, as in I never saw anyone try to grab or harm a bird. Likewise, I never had a lorikeet try to bite a visitor. The more frequent problem we had was visitors freaking out – I was not prepared for how many people are absolutely terrified of birds and just don’t realize it until one lands on them. On some busy days, I would have to come back at the end of the day with a new pitcher to feed the lorikeets – so many visitors would suddenly panic when a bird would land on them that they’d scream and throw their cup into the gravel, from which the birds were able to get very little of it. On very busy days the nectar would be consumed by noon and the lorikeets, fat and full, would be resting on their perches – we’d have to deal with angry parents who wanted to buy nectar, even after we told them the birds were full. We’d relent and make some up anyway – only for parents to then be upset that the birds wouldn’t come to them.
View attachment 785632
At the end of the day, all unconsumed nectar was poured into big flat feeding pans on the ground, which the lorikeets would lick clean in short order. I’d assume that they got most of their moisture from their diet – both the nectar and the fruit – but water bowls were also provided.
Winters were my least favorite time to be a lorikeet keeper. True, we were closed and that meant I didn’t have to rush through my day to be ready for feedings several times a day. But in the spring, summer, and fall, they were mostly fed outside. In the winter, they were fed indoors – and that meant that I had to clean indoors. Nectar runs right through lorikeets, and each day their holding building would be covered with the whitewash of their sticky, smelly feces. Cleaning the floor was bad enough, but their feces would literally paint the stainless steel mesh that fronted their holding, and it took forever to scrub clean. All of this while surrounded by their constant chattering in the echoing little building, and it was enough to make you scream… but that only would have added to the noise.
A few months before I left that zoo, lorikeets just started… dying. At a rate of about one every few days. No symptoms, one would be healthy one day, and then be found deceased the next. No cause was known, and our boss was notoriously stingy about calling a vet, convinced in his own ability to solve all problems himself, while simultaneously furious at us for not stopping the deaths. We tried everything, and eventually took to mixing the antibiotic tetracycline into their nectar (I spent a lot of time frantically reading everything I could about lorikeet health and eventually thought that Chlamydia seemed to be the most likely cause, which led us to the tetracycline). Deaths immediately stopped – but would start again if we were to stop mixing it in. As long as they stayed on it, they were very healthy and hearty. Withdraw it, bad things happened.
My boss was keenly aware of each lorikeet loss – not only did each lorikeet cost hundreds of dollars, but if the flock dipped too low, we wouldn’t have an effective feeding aviary. For that reason, he was also unwilling to let us provide nest boxes and try to breed the birds to replenish numbers, as he was concerned that if they paired off, they wouldn’t take food from people. The whole place really was a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t place.
With the expense of lorikeets (both as individuals and in terms of feeding), it’s no surprise that many zoos, especially the smaller ones, began switching to their less-expensive alternative. Budgerigars are much, much cheaper to feed and obtain, and at my next zoo, we converted an old aviary (which itself was almost empty at the time) to a budgiary, adding a small holding building and redoing the wire. Over 500 budgies were obtained for it. The aviary was similar to the lorikeet aviary at the other zoo, but had river rock substrate instead of grass, with the idea that we would just hose it down every day. Their indoor holding building had a large, wire cage, suspended off the ground over a tarp. Each day, we’d drag that tarp outside and soak it clean, putting another tarp in its place while it dried.
The budgies were fed seed sticks on paraffin wax, which our gift shop staff churned out constantly whenever they didn’t have customers. Like the lorikeet nectar, I’m uncertain as to how much of the food actually made it to the birds, and I found an amazing number of sticks in all sorts of enclosures where they shouldn’t have been – even floating in the alligator pond (presumably people tossed them to make the gators move?). Unfortunately, all of those dropped sticks had a way of attracting other animals – and the river rocks in the aviary, it seemed, formed a perfect habitat for rats. Some of which, I suspect, developed a taste for budgies.
Given a choice between the two, I much preferred working with lorikeets. When you work with a flock of thirty birds, you’re still able to recognize them as individuals and get to know their character and personality and see their behavior. It felt like they were actual birds – whereas the budgies were too numerous, too indistinguishable, that they felt like a seed-eating machine. Also, it’s a lot easier to provide better welfare for a smaller flock of larger, more recognizable individuals. Sure, we had the disease problem with the lorikeets, but that was a boss problem, not a bird problem – if we’d had a proper vet, I’m sure we would have solved it much more easily. It was especially hard to keep the budgies safe during feedings, as with so many birds, and all smaller than the lorikeets, it was much easier for a budgie to wind up underfoot (we insisted that strollers be kept outside the aviary – but on busy days, we’d sometimes outsource budgie duty to volunteers or interns, who were a lot less assertive about enforcing that rule against pushy parents). It was hard being a budgiary keeper and NOT feel like you were constantly letting the birds down.
Perhaps as a result, but I find that when I visit other zoos, I’m able to enjoy a good lorikeet feeding aviary (when we have a Zoo Day for conferences, like AZA midyear, I’ll often take advantage and pop into one). I don’t think I’ve ever seen a budgie aviary and not felt a slight internal grimace.
ctual gas heating we had in the whole zoo). The outdoor aviary was grassy, with a gravel path forming a loop through it, lined with rope-and-post fencing to keep visitors on the path. There was a fair bit of perching, most of it lining the path and with distance and height in mind to keep the birds close to visitors.
View attachment 785631
Every day, I would mix up a batch of the nectar – a powder stirred into warm water until it was the consistency of a somewhat thin smoothie. I have a very strong sweet tooth and am addicted to sugar, but I have to admit, I found the liquid almost nauseating in its sickly-sweet smell, and I think I would have sooner drunk bleach than the mixture... which I mentioned because many of my coworkers did take a shot of it... once (you yourselves, ZooChatters, have likely fed lorikeets at a zoo before, and may not have noticed the smell. It’s not nearly so strong when it’s in a small cup, as opposed to a huge pitcher). On days when we expected to be very busy, we’d water the mixture down a bit more to make it last longer throughout the day. The nectar was supplemented each day with chopped produce, sometimes mixed into the nectar, sometimes scattered around the yard.
Lorikeet management was focused around the feedings. The aviary was locked (but visible from the outside) and only open at feeding times. When we were at the busy open season, there were three half-hour public feedings a day. When possible on busy days, we tried to have two keepers present – one to sit at the entrance vestibule, take money, and dispense the cups and explain the rules, the other to watch the inside of the aviary and monitor interactions. Visitors were, I will say, fairly well behaved in the aviary, as in I never saw anyone try to grab or harm a bird. Likewise, I never had a lorikeet try to bite a visitor. The more frequent problem we had was visitors freaking out – I was not prepared for how many people are absolutely terrified of birds and just don’t realize it until one lands on them. On some busy days, I would have to come back at the end of the day with a new pitcher to feed the lorikeets – so many visitors would suddenly panic when a bird would land on them that they’d scream and throw their cup into the gravel, from which the birds were able to get very little of it. On very busy days the nectar would be consumed by noon and the lorikeets, fat and full, would be resting on their perches – we’d have to deal with angry parents who wanted to buy nectar, even after we told them the birds were full. We’d relent and make some up anyway – only for parents to then be upset that the birds wouldn’t come to them.
View attachment 785632
At the end of the day, all unconsumed nectar was poured into big flat feeding pans on the ground, which the lorikeets would lick clean in short order. I’d assume that they got most of their moisture from their diet – both the nectar and the fruit – but water bowls were also provided.
Winters were my least favorite time to be a lorikeet keeper. True, we were closed and that meant I didn’t have to rush through my day to be ready for feedings several times a day. But in the spring, summer, and fall, they were mostly fed outside. In the winter, they were fed indoors – and that meant that I had to clean indoors. Nectar runs right through lorikeets, and each day their holding building would be covered with the whitewash of their sticky, smelly feces. Cleaning the floor was bad enough, but their feces would literally paint the stainless steel mesh that fronted their holding, and it took forever to scrub clean. All of this while surrounded by their constant chattering in the echoing little building, and it was enough to make you scream… but that only would have added to the noise.
A few months before I left that zoo, lorikeets just started… dying. At a rate of about one every few days. No symptoms, one would be healthy one day, and then be found deceased the next. No cause was known, and our boss was notoriously stingy about calling a vet, convinced in his own ability to solve all problems himself, while simultaneously furious at us for not stopping the deaths. We tried everything, and eventually took to mixing the antibiotic tetracycline into their nectar (I spent a lot of time frantically reading everything I could about lorikeet health and eventually thought that Chlamydia seemed to be the most likely cause, which led us to the tetracycline). Deaths immediately stopped – but would start again if we were to stop mixing it in. As long as they stayed on it, they were very healthy and hearty. Withdraw it, bad things happened.
My boss was keenly aware of each lorikeet loss – not only did each lorikeet cost hundreds of dollars, but if the flock dipped too low, we wouldn’t have an effective feeding aviary. For that reason, he was also unwilling to let us provide nest boxes and try to breed the birds to replenish numbers, as he was concerned that if they paired off, they wouldn’t take food from people. The whole place really was a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t place.
With the expense of lorikeets (both as individuals and in terms of feeding), it’s no surprise that many zoos, especially the smaller ones, began switching to their less-expensive alternative. Budgerigars are much, much cheaper to feed and obtain, and at my next zoo, we converted an old aviary (which itself was almost empty at the time) to a budgiary, adding a small holding building and redoing the wire. Over 500 budgies were obtained for it. The aviary was similar to the lorikeet aviary at the other zoo, but had river rock substrate instead of grass, with the idea that we would just hose it down every day. Their indoor holding building had a large, wire cage, suspended off the ground over a tarp. Each day, we’d drag that tarp outside and soak it clean, putting another tarp in its place while it dried.
The budgies were fed seed sticks on paraffin wax, which our gift shop staff churned out constantly whenever they didn’t have customers. Like the lorikeet nectar, I’m uncertain as to how much of the food actually made it to the birds, and I found an amazing number of sticks in all sorts of enclosures where they shouldn’t have been – even floating in the alligator pond (presumably people tossed them to make the gators move?). Unfortunately, all of those dropped sticks had a way of attracting other animals – and the river rocks in the aviary, it seemed, formed a perfect habitat for rats. Some of which, I suspect, developed a taste for budgies.
Given a choice between the two, I much preferred working with lorikeets. When you work with a flock of thirty birds, you’re still able to recognize them as individuals and get to know their character and personality and see their behavior. It felt like they were actual birds – whereas the budgies were too numerous, too indistinguishable, that they felt like a seed-eating machine. Also, it’s a lot easier to provide better welfare for a smaller flock of larger, more recognizable individuals. Sure, we had the disease problem with the lorikeets, but that was a boss problem, not a bird problem – if we’d had a proper vet, I’m sure we would have solved it much more easily. It was especially hard to keep the budgies safe during feedings, as with so many birds, and all smaller than the lorikeets, it was much easier for a budgie to wind up underfoot (we insisted that strollers be kept outside the aviary – but on busy days, we’d sometimes outsource budgie duty to volunteers or interns, who were a lot less assertive about enforcing that rule against pushy parents). It was hard being a budgiary keeper and NOT feel like you were constantly letting the birds down.
Perhaps as a result, but I find that when I visit other zoos, I’m able to enjoy a good lorikeet feeding aviary (when we have a Zoo Day for conferences, like AZA midyear, I’ll often take advantage and pop into one). I don’t think I’ve ever seen a budgie aviary and not felt a slight internal grimace.