Little
Lorikeet
FAMILY:
Loriidae
GENUS: Glossopsitta
SPECIES: pusilla
OTHER
NAMES: Little Keet, Green Keet, Green Parakeet, Green Leek, Jerryang.
Description:
Small
Lorikeet with similar sexes.
General body plumage is bright green with a yellow tinge on underparts. Face is red. Nape and
upper mantle bronze-brown tint over green. Tail is green with outer tail
feathers bearing red markings. Underwing coverts
yellow-green. eyes ornage-yellow, bill black and legs green-grey.
Females
resemble males but are generally a little duller. Immatures are duller than the adults, especially in the
face, with a dark olive-brown bill.
Little
Lorikeets are strongly arboreal and is difficult to spot because of its size.
However it is gregarious in its activities (except breeding) and is usually
encountered in small parties which may become quite fearless when feeding. These
birds may also congregate into large flocks at groves of profusely flowering
eucalypts.
Length:
150-155mm.
Subspecies:
None.
Distribution:
Eastern
Australia from about Carins (Qld) to western Victroia and
(formerly) the Mount Lofty Ranges (SA).
It has also been recorded as a rare vagrant in Tasmania.
Habitat:
dry
open woodlands and forests, also heath and banksia
scrub and riverine woodland.
Diet:
Mainly
nectar, supplemented with pollen, fruit and seeds.
Specialised
diets have been developed for lorikeets in captivity. These are pollen and
nectar substitutes and a number of reputable brands are now available.
Essentially, these come in two forms; a wet mix (nectar substitute) and a dry
mix (pollen substitute) both of which are essential. Although these diets are
designed to provide the essential requirements for lorikeets, they must be
substituted with other foods such as fresh fruits (apples and pears,
stone-fruits, most citruses, banana, melon etc.) and seed. You will find that
certain fruits are preferable to others at particular times of year (eg. citrus is preferred in summer).
Breeding:
August-January.
The usual nesting site is a tree cavity at a height of around 10m, preferably in
a living eucalypt near water. The nest lining is a layer of wood dust.
Only
the female incubates the eggs, but both sexes feed and rear the young.
In
captivity Little Lorikeets will readily nest in both logs and boxes, but for
convenience it is best to use a box. These should be about 30cm x 15cm x 15cm
and hung horizontally at a slight inclination such that the eggs collect at one
end of the box. Preferred nesting material is wood-dust or shavings. Shavings
should not be too coarse so as to prevent the eggs becoming buried in it.
Courtship
Display
Courting
males approach females stretched to their full height, but without the arching
of the neck as seen in the Trichoglossus. As he
approaches, the male hops and bobs his head, meanwhile frequently wiping his
bill along the perch. There is some dilation of the pupils and a soft whistling
has also been recorded during this process.
Sexual
Maturity:
Become
fully adult and capable of breeding at 12 months of age.
Clutch:
4
white rounded eggs (20mm x 17mm).
Incubation period: 22 days. The young usually fledge at around 30 days.
Mutations
and Hybrids:
Fertile
hybrids have been recorded with the Musk Lorikeet.
Suitable
Aviaries and Compatible Birds
Little
Lorikeets may be housed in either a suspended cage or a large aviary. The
minimum size for a breeding pair is around 45cm x 35cm x60cm. They may also be
safely housed in larger aviaries with other birds such as finches, native pigions and quail. These birds can be housed with other
species such as some of the small parrots etc., but under these circumstances it
is unlikely that they will breed. Best breeding results are obtained either when
they are housed one pair to a suspended cage, or in a
colony situation in a larger aviary.
Species
Specific Problems:
Because
lorikeets have specialised diets (part of which is
liquid) and a very short gut-passage rate (and hence produce large volumes of
liquid faeces) they are very susceptible indeed to
bacterial and fungal infections of the digestive tract. This means that in order
to avoid disease a high standard of hygiene is essential. Similarly, aviaries
and feeding stations should be constructed in such a way as to minimise
the opportunity for birds to foul their foods.
Fungal infections tend to
manifest themselves as slimy or cheesy blobs inside the beak, throat and crop
although milder cases may not be as easily detected. Bacterial infections, on
the other hand, are usually detected by means of examining the faeces.
Faeces of an infected bird may have either a (too)
large liquid component or (more commonly) is discoloured and tends to be green. In less virulent
infections the bird may just seem lethargic and disinterested in foods or toys
etc.
Other
problems encountered in lorkeets include feather
plucking of nestlings by their parents (unavoidable when encountered except by
removing chicks for hand rearing)and psittacine
beak and feather disease. The latter is an incurable condition which is
transmitted through the faeces. The disease
prevents proper feather formation and feather loss and causes the beak to become
weak and crumble. Birds carrying this disease are best destroyed as it is
debilitating and inevitably leads to death.