Cockatoos Parrot

Any of various large parrots, especially of the genus Kakatoe of Australia and adjacent areas, characterized by a long erectile crest.

About Cockatoos
Family: Cacatuidae ~ Subfamily: Cacatuinae


Genus(5): Cacatua, Probosciger, Calyptorhynchus, Callocephalon, Eolophus
Cockatoos are extremely affectionate, their feathers are very soft, and they are gorgeous!....on top of that, they are real intelligent and very inquisitive birds!


Cockatoos love to show off and make comical displays with outspread wings, head bobbing, dancing and loud calls. They are very active and curious about their environment. Happy cockatoos spend most of their waking time performing, or examining and manipulating their toys and other cage objects.
A single cockatoo will thrive as a your pet if you devote time and attention to it, playing with it and sharing affections on a regular daily basis. However, two pet cockatoos are ideal if you are not able to devote so much time and attention as the bird will demand. Two will help to prevent bad habits from developing by a bored bird, such as screeching and feather plucking.




Parrots Play Stands
Cockatoos Parrots

Description:
The term "cockatoo" is a Malaysian word thought to have possibly two meanings, "pincher" or "old father".
Pincher is definitely descriptive as the cockatoos have extremely powerful beaks, and can take apart or demolish a wooden toy in a no time!
These birds both look and behave differently than any of the other parrots. They mostly have a single color plumage, either white or dark and they have "erectile crests", a mobile crest of feathers. Their beaks are enormously powerful and they can easily demolish objects.
Cockatoos are thought to be the longest lived of all parrots with examples cited of the greater sulphur-crested having lived over 100 years. It is difficult to determine the age of a cockatoo, however young cockatoos will have a beak that is smooth and pale and their plumage will be paler, while an older bird's beak will be darker and have striations and their plumage will have a fuller coloration.
On most species, the eye iris of the female will become red to red-brown after about two years. This helps to determine the sex of the bird also. The eye coloration is not so pronounced on some species, however. On these the sex must be determined by either a surgical probe, endoscopy, which can be done by many veterinarians or by a DNA testing, usually a blood sample or a few plucked feathers sent to be diagnosed in a lab.

Distribution:
The cockatoos natural habitats are found over large areas of Australia and Indonesia. They are found in three very distinct ranges, the tropical rainforest which are wet with high temperatures, the grassy plains, and the dry savannahs.
There are 18 species of cockatoo (including the well-know cockatiel) and 37 sub-species, of these only a handful became well known due to importation restrictions. Cockatoos are among those birds that are endangered or threatened with extinction. There is an export ban on all birds from Australia, so young birds available for public sale in the United States today are captive bred birds.
Care and feeding:

The cockatoo's personal hygiene must include a weekly shower or bath to get rid of its' accumulated feather dust and keep its' plumage in good shape. A shower can be accomplished with either a hand held shower sprayer or a hose with a fine spray head and lukewarm water. A bath pan or ceramic dish 12"-14" (30-35 cm) can be placed on the bottom of the cage or mounted at about 39" (1m) above the floor in an aviary. The wings should be kept trim if you want to discourage flight and to prevent the loss of your pet through an open window or door. The beak and claws need to be trimmed if they are not worn down from climbing and chewing. A variety of concrete type perches are available to help the keep nails trim, but they should still be trimmed if they become overgrown. Cockatoos will demolish mineral blocks, lava blocks, and other beak grooming items in a matter of a few minutes so they won't work to keep beaks trim!
A Cockatoos' diet consisting of a basic large hookbill seed mix with supplements of sprouted seeds and all sorts of fruits and vegetables is generally regarded as suitable. Some examples of supplements are apples, pears, plums, raisons, oranges, bananas, peaches, carrots, broccoli, lettuce, chickweed, dandelions, and lots more! Do not feed avocado as it is toxic to birds! Occasional proteins can be offered such as cottage cheese, bits of cheese, hardboiled eggs, canned dog food, and cooked meat bones. Stay away from highly seasoned, fatty processed meats. Vitamins and minerals should not be necessary with a good varied diet except in times of change or stress. Because they destroy calcium blocks, calcium should be sprinkled on their food about once a week.

Housing:
Your cockatoo is very social and inquisitive, so the room you house your pet in must be a room that gets visited frequently by the family. Place the cage at eye level in a quiet sunny area away from drafts. A minimum size cage to house a small cockatoo in is 27"x27"x39" (70x70x100 cm). A larger cage for larger cockatoos must be considered. Horizontal bars are important as your cockatoo needs to climb. Keep in mind that because of the strength of their beaks, cockatoos are able to bend bars and pop the joints on cages. For additional security on the cage door, a snap lock is recommended.
A suitable indoor aviary should be 39"x39"x78" (100x100x200 cm). Perches should be 1" (26-30 mm) for a small cockatoo and 1 1/2" to 2" (35-45 mm) for a larger cockatoo. Branches from fruit trees are excellent and provide varying widths for foot exercises as well as roughness for beak and nail trimming. Food and water dishes need to be ceramic or stainless steel.
An outdoor or breeding aviary needs to have a protected shelter that can be heated and cooled where necessary and have a sand floor. An attached flight cage should be 78"x117"x78" (2x3x2 m) for small cockatoos, and of course bigger for larger cockatoos. One third of the flight cage should be covered. Equip the flight cage with a perch at each end. A climbing branch and a bird bath are nice additions too.

Maintenance:
The basic cage care includes daily cleaning of the water and food dishes and wiping off the feather dust from the bars and perches. Twice weekly change the bottom trays and replace the soiled litter. Weekly you should wash all the perches and dirty toys and monthly you should clean the entire cage. A total hosing down and disinfecting of an aviary and flight should be done twice a year, replacing anything that needs to be freshened, such as old dishes, toys, perches, and the sand on the floor.
Social Behaviors:
In the wild, all cockatoo species live together in flocks, some species may flock in groups of only 8-10 birds while others species will flock in the thousands.
Because of their need to socialize, cockatoos are generally best kept in pairs. They also do fine with another bird of similar size for companionship. The main reason for pairing is so that they do not become so dependent on their keeper and their keepers time. The drawback to keeping a pair is that the noise will be much greater. Cockatoos love to play and will keep it up all day, but part of their play includes loud calls, which in some cases can turn into long earsplitting shrieks.
Cockatoos and other pets such as dogs and cats may or may not develop a friendly relationship with each other. This is generally a "wait and see" situation. Other small animals such as rodents and small birds are best kept away from a cockatoo. If they fall prey to the cockatoo's beak, it can be fatal.
Cockatoos with babies or small children, never leave them unattended! Cockatoos can get very jealous of babies and small children!They child could get attacked by the cockatoo's beak or sharp claws so you should always be on your guard. Cockatoos and older children will often do fine, again it's a "wait and see" situation. You won't know until the relationship unfolds over time

Handling/Training:
The cockatoo is highly intelligent and their ability to repeat some words or sounds can be accomplished with repeated training, but this is not the cockatoo's strength. Their outstanding ability comes from being great performers! This is demonstrated by such antics as dancing, playing tug-of-war, climbing, and shaking. They will use "tools", various objects and toys to play and perform with, such as roller skating. They are very inventive and if toys are not provided they will use what is at hand, often that takes the form of their food dishes and perches.
To be able to handle and train your cockatoo depends first on trust, so go slowly and be consistent. Taming proceeds in steps, start with cage taming where you can approach your cockatoo's cage without it jumping off it's perch and heading to an opposite corner. You overcome this by talking to your pet with soothing words and slow gentle movements until it gets accustomed to you. Next is hand taming, where your cockatoo will climb on your hand and allow you to carry it around. You can accomplish this by offering it treats from outside the cage until it is comfortable with your hand. As your cockatoo becomes comfortable with taking treats from your hand, you then open the cage door and repeat the same process but now you are reaching into it's cage with the treat. Once you've earned it's trust, your cockatoo will begin climbing on your hand and allowing you to pet him.
Other training, such as tricks and imitating speech will take patience and repeated efforts. A handfed baby will not need much taming and can often be handled right away, as it is use to human attention. Remember that taming and training a bird takes patience, never 'punish' your pet! This only serves to destroy the trust you've spent so much time building.

Activities:
Exercise and play are important activities for the physical well being and psychological health of all cockatoos. They are extraordinarily playful and will play all day long with only short breaks for rest. Getting out of the cage onto a playpen with lots of climbing branches is also very important for the emotional well being of your pet. These activities help deter distress and prevent the problems of screeching and feather picking. Provide your parrot with lots of activities in the form of large link chains, bird ladders, parrot swings, ropes, fresh branches for gnawing and chewing, and rotate new bird toys on a regular basis.
When a new toy is introduced, your cockatoo will approach it warily.The bird will examine with caution and observe it from all sides. Once it has done this, it will accept and play with it for hours. Cockatoos that have flight feathers will fly if out of their cage. If you have a flight aviary, your cockatoo will love to fly between perches widely spaced apart. A cockatoo that is clipped cannot fly so it cannot use a flight aviary. It will take about a year for it's feathers to grow back.

Breeding/Reproduction:
The best success in breeding cockatoos in captivity started with the greater sulphur-crested, lesser sulphur-crested, and the rose-breasted cockatoos, though several others are now also being breed successfully. Pet cockatoos have a very difficult time getting used to a mate so are very hard to use for attempts at breeding. Establishing any harmonious cockatoo pair can be difficult. It is best to have several young birds together and let them pair naturally.
Most cockatoo species are easily sexed. The lesser sulphur-crested, greater sulphur-crested, umbrella, Goffin's, rose-breasted and Philippine cockatoos have a red-brown, brown, or chestnut-brown iris in the female after about two years of age. The moluccan is basically the same except the female iris is dark brown so it can be difficult to distinguish from the slightly darker iris of the male. Both sexes of the bare-eyed cockatoo have the dark iris, but the male is a larger bird and the female has more feathering around the eye than the male. Sometimes with the bare-eyed and the moluccan you can only be certain if you have them sexed by either a surgical probe, endoscopy, a DNA test, or a chromosonal analysis.
Place the cockatoo's square nesting box, or a round hollowed out tree trunk of the same approximate size, high in the aviary. On the bottom of the nest box, put a 4" (10 cm) layer of soft bedding such as wood shavings. The nesting box for a small cockatoo should be 10"-12" (25-30 cm) wide x 23"-31" (60-80 cm) high, with a hole size of 4" (10-12 cm). For a medium cockatoo it should be 12"-14" (30-35 cm) wide x 31"-39" (80-100 cm) high, with a hole size of 4"-5" (10-12 cm). For the larger cockatoos it should be 14"-18" (35-45 cm) wide x 47"-59" (120-150 cm) high with a hole size of 5"-6" (12-15 cm).
The cockatoo female will lay between 2 to 3 eggs. Brooding, depending on which species, is between 25 to 30 days. The young are naked and blind when hatched and don't open their eyes for several weeks. Hatchlings take between 60 and 100 days to become fully plumed and at that time they will begin to explore outside of the nest. However they will still be dependent for another two to three weeks before ready leave the nest for good.
Because the cockatoos are threatened with extinction, successful breeding is helping to preserve the species and reduce the number of wild caught birds. There are no breeding regulations in the United States, Canada, or the United Kingdom, though other countries might have restrictions and you should consult with the authorities in your country before undertaking breeding.

Potential Problems:
A cockatoo that is well cared for will seldom become ill. Though it is often difficult to determine illness, some visible signs of illness can be plumage that is lusterless, ruffled, or has bare spots. Other signs may be having no appetite, sneezing, discharge from the nostrils, slit eyes instead of round, the bird sleeps a lot resting on both feet instead of having one foot tucked up, develops movements of neurotic screaming, begins feather plucking, and any change in the feces. Some of the common illnesses your cockatoo could contract are parasites, intestinal inflammation, coccidiosis, respiratory ailments, feather picking, and parrot fever also known as psittacosis which is not common but is contagious to humans and can be dangerous.
Isolate the bird in a hospital cage with an infrared lamp placed about 23" (60 cm) distance from the cage. If it does not perk within 24 hours, the ailing parrot should be taken to a avian veterinarian for diagnosis and treatment.

Availability:
Several cockatoo species are readily available in the pet industry and you should be able to get one from a pet store. There are many handfed babies becoming increasingly available.

Back>>
Adoption Rescue Fostering | Handfeeding Dont's | Addict Enthusiast | How Not To Clip A Bird | Egg Food | Foot Problems In Parrots
Tom Making | Taxonomy of the Cockatoo | BirdBrain's Rockie Bits | Zinc & Parrots | Healt Problems | Wing Clipping
Unsafe Plant | Safe Plant | List of Metals | Top Ten Bird Killers | Aqqression Help | Beak & Feather Disease
Pet Birds & Cancer | Five Aviary Diseases | Love Sick | Chlamydiosis | Cage Territoriality | Pet Bird Make You Sick
Avian Diseases, illnesses & Injuries | Spring Behavior | Handling Avian Emergency | Weaning Baby
General Info | Articles | Contact Us | Site Map
Copyright © 2005,  Premier cages  TERMS & CONDITIONS