The macaw is a colourful tropical parrot innate to
of South America. Many of the different macaw species are
today measured to be endangered animals. The macaw is an omnivorous animal and feeds on nuts and fruit in the trees along with insects, eggs and small mammals and reptiles. The macaw is known to sleep during the night meaning that the macaw is a diurnal animal, and in the morning the macaw will often fly long distances in order to find food.
The macaw is one of the largest
species of parrot in the world, with the average adult macaw growing to more
than a meter in height. The macaw is well known for it's array of brightly
coloured feathers which are often many different colours including blue, red,
yellow and green.
Macaws have recently become very
popular as pets, and there is a flourishing black market for some of the rarer
breeds of macaw. This only donates to their endangered status. Please, do not
buy imported macaws. The declining macaw populations is also due to the fact
that the macaw's natural rainforest
habitat is being
destroyed due to deforestation, which is happening all over Central and South
America at an alarming rate.
The macaw has a large and powerful
beak which means that the macaw can break the shells of nuts and seeds more
easily. Like other species of parrot, macaws have four toes on each foot, with two toes facing
forward and two toes facing backward. This foot adaptation helps the macaw to
grip onto prey and tree branches more easily and allows the macaw to perch
in the trees without slipping off.
Macaws are known to be intellectual
and very sociable birds and macaws can often be seen together in large flocks of up
to 30 macaw individuals. Macaws communicate between one another using loud
vocal calls such as squawking and screaming. Some species of macaw are even
known to be able to mimic (copy) human sounds.
The macaw is one of the world's animals that is
known to have the same breeding partner for their whole lives.
Macaw couples do not only breed together but they also share their food and help to groom one another. When the female macaw has laid her eggs (typically 2 but more are common), the female macaw sits on her eggs to incubate them while the male macaw hunts and collects food for them both. The macaw chicks hatch after about a month.
Macaws are well known to humans in
the areas in which they inhabit and have been known to be hunted by local
tribesmen for their brightly coloured feathers. The macaw however, is also
widely respected and even appears on the one of the Brazilian bank notes.
Macaw couples do not only breed together but they also share their food and help to groom one another. When the female macaw has laid her eggs (typically 2 but more are common), the female macaw sits on her eggs to incubate them while the male macaw hunts and collects food for them both. The macaw chicks hatch after about a month.
0 comments :
Post a Comment