Legal Battles Risk the Lives of African Grey Parrots

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Authorities intercepted 161 captive African Grey Parrots being smuggled in three tiny crates into South Africa from the Democratic Republic of the Congo in April.

The birds were taken to a quarantine station in Kempton Park and are being held in a concrete cell where they are getting no natural sunlight. The health of the birds is deteriorating—some have died.

Willem Grobler, a Limpopo based parrot breeder has claimed ownership of the birds however he cannot prove it in court. While the courts argue over the destiny of the parrots, the World Parrot Trust Africa have cared for the birds, funding their feeding, disease testing, veterinary care and quarantine costs. This has resulted in over R40 000 being spent so far.

The Trust would like to see the release of the African Grey Parrots into the wild. Three potential release sites have been secured with the Congo-Brazzaville, Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda governments—all areas where the birds have gone extinct or locally extinct.

Unfortunately the birds will have to wait as the legal aspects of such an export have to be adhered to before the birds can be exported and released.

For more information on this story visit http://www.iol.co.za/birds-perish-as-ownership-row-rages-1.1101863

(Info taken from www.iol.co.za 19 July 2011)

Lets Help Bring Back the Cape Parrot

Friday, August 05, 2011

Two South African organisations are joining forces to give the critically endangered Cape Parrot a chance at strengthening their numbers by planting over 22 000 Yellow wood trees over the next two years.


There is believed to be only 1000 Cape Parrots left in the wild today.  The Wild Bird Trust and the Percy FitzPatrick Institute are planting the trees with the help of local communities in the Eastern Cape’s Amathole region.


They are also planting wild plums, wild olives and white ironwood which will produce fruits to feed the beautiful parrots. The surrounding communities have an incentive of R10 every six months for each tree that has survived
that’s R22 0000 a year over a five year period!

600 Cape Parrot nest boxes will also be erected across the Amathole mountain range.




(Info and picture taken from Times Live 24 July 2011)


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