Kitekeeper
Well-known member
- Jun 19, 2021
- 263
- 701
- Parrots
- Budgerigar (Bud), Pacific Parrotlet (Sam), Roseicollis lovebird (BJ and Turq), Linneolated parakeet (Charlie and Emma)
Hi,
I would like to hear from your experience regarding what to do with wild orphan baby birds.
It is no uncommon to find myself in this situation. As a bird person I am always alert to baby birds in the ground after a storm in order to help them to return to the nest or to help raise them if their parents are not found.
This is a subject that after many years I still have not an opinion on the best thing to do after the baby is grown up. Most of them I freed when I was convinced that they could find food by themselves. Very few I kept as I was not convinced they were able to survive, most of this cases the bird was a quite social species that needs some time with the parents to learn where to find food and what to eat. One case the baby was born completely blind....so impossible to release.
However, I am still not entirely convinced that even young birds of those species that need the parents to learn, would not eventually happen to learn by themselves where to go for food.
Last week after a rainstorm I´ve found a baby Palm Tanager in the ground, wet to the bones. The parents were close and anxious. I caught the baby, put it close to a heat source and fed it. The next day I´ve put his little "nestbox" in the window for the parents to come and feed it. They came twice and never more. The baby kept calling and kind of get depressed. I chose to no more expose it to this and kept feeding the poor guy.
He is now bigger, smarter and almost learning to eat without my help, but I am not sure it could be freed as it might not have enough energy to fail find food for too long as I don´t expect the parents to re-join it.
Palm Tanager are social fruit/insect eating birds and might need some time to learn how to eat by themselves. The several ruddy ground dove that I helped in the past were a lot easier to learn what to feed as they even tried to eat the printed letters in the newspaper that was put in the bottom of the cage . The Rufous-bellied thrush also were quite generalist-eating birds that I felt confident to release....but this tanager....I don´t know...unfortunately we have no trustworthy wildlife government entities to pass on the baby here, as most of this places are receiving way too little resources to work properly...
Below when he just arrived
A few minutes latter...dried up!
Today
I would like to hear from your experience regarding what to do with wild orphan baby birds.
It is no uncommon to find myself in this situation. As a bird person I am always alert to baby birds in the ground after a storm in order to help them to return to the nest or to help raise them if their parents are not found.
This is a subject that after many years I still have not an opinion on the best thing to do after the baby is grown up. Most of them I freed when I was convinced that they could find food by themselves. Very few I kept as I was not convinced they were able to survive, most of this cases the bird was a quite social species that needs some time with the parents to learn where to find food and what to eat. One case the baby was born completely blind....so impossible to release.
However, I am still not entirely convinced that even young birds of those species that need the parents to learn, would not eventually happen to learn by themselves where to go for food.
Last week after a rainstorm I´ve found a baby Palm Tanager in the ground, wet to the bones. The parents were close and anxious. I caught the baby, put it close to a heat source and fed it. The next day I´ve put his little "nestbox" in the window for the parents to come and feed it. They came twice and never more. The baby kept calling and kind of get depressed. I chose to no more expose it to this and kept feeding the poor guy.
He is now bigger, smarter and almost learning to eat without my help, but I am not sure it could be freed as it might not have enough energy to fail find food for too long as I don´t expect the parents to re-join it.
Palm Tanager are social fruit/insect eating birds and might need some time to learn how to eat by themselves. The several ruddy ground dove that I helped in the past were a lot easier to learn what to feed as they even tried to eat the printed letters in the newspaper that was put in the bottom of the cage . The Rufous-bellied thrush also were quite generalist-eating birds that I felt confident to release....but this tanager....I don´t know...unfortunately we have no trustworthy wildlife government entities to pass on the baby here, as most of this places are receiving way too little resources to work properly...
Below when he just arrived
A few minutes latter...dried up!
Today