Drunken parrots falling from sky

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Parrots intoxicated by a mystery substance are dropping out of the sky near Darwin.

SEEMINGLY DRUNKEN AND HUNGOVER parrots are dropping out of the sky in the Northern Territory and experts are at a loss to explain why.

The red-collared lorikeets lose coordination and pass out after eating a mystery food, Lisa Hansen, of the Ark Animal Hospital at Palmerston, near Darwin said on Thursday. Red-collared lorikeets are an NT subspecies of the rainbow lorikeet (Trichoglossus rubritorquis).

"It happens every year around this season, they lose all balance and we find them fallen out of trees and the sky," she says. "Unless someone intervenes, they can't fly and will get picked up by predators."

Unable to function

"It seems that the birds get intoxicated by something they have eaten and it renders them unable to fly and function... they can get very sick as a result."  Around eight to ten birds a day have been brought to the hospital after falling to the ground in backyards and along roadsides. There are now a total of 40 lorikeets receiving treatment.

"We are fairly certain it's a plant, but we don't know which plant. People talk about seeing drunken birds under umbrella trees when they are flowering," says Lisa. "However, most say those birds recovered and flew away afterwards. That is not happening to these guys... sometimes they need intensive care before we can put them out in the aviaries."

It can take up to four weeks for the animals to make a full recovery, at which point they are released back into the wild. Hospital vets have speculated that a plant is causing the lorikeets to become intoxicated, but tests have not yet identified any particular toxin.

Mild poisoning

Chris Tzaros, an ecologist and parrot expert at conservation group Birds Australia says he has had similar experiences with musk lorikeets, which are common in south-eastern Australia.

"Those birds become drunk on eucalypt nectar. They feed in some blossom, and then fall out of the blossom, disoriented to the ground," he told Australian Geographic. "These birds evolved to feed on eucalypt nectar all day long, everyday. It might be a particular time of the year when the nectar ferments or a particular tree which affects the birds."

He suggests that if the red-collared lorikeets are taking three to four weeks to recover, it could be something more sinister such as mild poisoning. "I have not heard of anything like that, and it could be really interesting to observe what they are feeding on," Chris says. "People who see and pick up sick lorikeets should try to observe the dietary items the birds nearby are foraging on."

"They are magnificent creatures and I wouldn't like to see us losing them over some mystery plant," says Lisa. "So far, the numbers [of sick] are a small proportion of the birds living in the wild, but who knows what the future will bring?"
The Northern Territory’s mix of ancient landscapes, biodiversity and culture guarantee a wealth of unique sights. The incredible Kakadu and Nitmiluk national parks are thronged with birds, animals and reptiles. Wander a bit deeper into the Red Centre and you’ll find the precarious rock piles of the Devil’s Marbles, the deep gorges of the MacDonnell Ranges, the brick red domes of the Kata Tjuta and the most recognised symbol of the outback: Uluru.
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Comments 14

  • What a horrible story. I wish I was there to pick them up and help make them better. Could it be someone who doesn't like birds and goes around sprinkling something to make them act like that? I know that's far fetched, but why, just of lately, is this happenning.? If it's something thanks to "mother nature" I sure hope they find out what! Very nice article for us bird lovers, but sad. Report

     
  • .... drunken parrots not cool.... still haven't figured out the cause.... how about taking a blood sample and see what shows up in there !! Hope they find out "why" real soon !! Report

     
  • Animals are bound to be drunk in the wild at some point - I personally don't see the big deal. It's something to laugh about a little bit but at the same time, help the birds out that are hurt from falling. Report

     
  • Animals are bound to be drunk in the wild at some point - I personally don't see the big deal. It's something to laugh about a little bit but at the same time, help the birds out that are hurt from falling. Report

     
  • Drunks are drunks but at least they're not verbally abusive when you hear, see or approach them. Report

     
  • this happens in QLD all the time. I was under the impression they were drunk on fermented fruit, just like people some are nice other aggressive drunks lol Report

     
  • Avocados create around %10 D-mannoheptulose (DM) in photosynthesis, DM metabolizes to perseitol (P) which is an alcohol. My little dog, when I was a boy would eat the hard green avocados in the family’s orchards quite often. I have long speculated that perhaps the purpose of the P was for it to cause the birds to become drunk, so that they would drop the fruit spreading avocados up the sides of mountains to find their perfect climate. Are there any new avocado plantings in the area? Report

     
  • What do you do with a drunkin parrot? Report

     
  • put them through detox, These birds love fruit, sometimes the fruit goes bad, really does make them drunk. They will be fine. Report

     
  • Avocado kills lorikeets.
    My uncle used to tell of rainbow lorikeets getting drunk on rotten mangoes at the Lion's Den Hotel near Cooktown. Report

     
  • I lived in Redcliffe Qld and witnessed these birds getting drunk then rolling around on the ground unable to fly after eating the overripe red fruit of the umbrella tree. The sugars in the fruit heated by the sun may have fermented and turned to alcohol, and it would not take much to affect a bird that size. Report

     
  • I would tend to believe that either this is a way of life for these birds or something that humans have introduced into nature is causing the problem. I could never believe and animal in its own natural habitat going through something such as this without human intervention. Is this their natural habitat?
    Report

     
  • I remember watching some lorikeets at a friends place in Humpty Doo about 20yrs ago. They were having a great old time eating the rotten mangoes that had fallen from the tree. They were screeching, tumbling over, back on their feet, tumbling over etc. Pretty much just doing the Territory Thing. Report

     
  • happened yesterday at Adelaide River, fell 10m out of a tree. Still alive this morning Report

     

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