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The Furry Critter Network

Blue Front Species Description

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Breed Organization

National Audubon Society

Cornell Lab of Orinthology

The Avian Web


Other Names
Blue Fronted Amazon

Classification
Order Psittaciformes
Family Psittacidae

Scientific Name
Amazona Aestiva

Species Description

Length: 36-38 cm (14-15 in). Green; bluish forehead, yellow throat, cheeks, and crown. Red or yellow bend of wing; wing coverts red. Eyes orange, beak blackish, legs gray. The heads of the young are a diluted green, blue, and yellow. The bend of the wing (actually the upperwing edge) is much paler and the iris is black.

Habitat

Wooded areas. Plentiful, although due to deforestation, their status has become dangerously affected.

Distribution

Brazil, Bolivia, and Paraguay


Captivity

Known as one of the most popular pets, with an excellant talking and mimic ability. Breeding successes are plentiful. The female lays 2-3 eggs, which she incubates for about 29 days. The male feeds her while she is incubating. Use a hollow log or nest box (40x40x150 cm) with a layer of peat mold. During the breeding season the pair is quite aggressive towards other birds, therefore they are best kept in roomy outdoor aviaries. After about three months the young leave the nest, but will continue to be fed for quite some time. Fruits, berries, greens, corn on the cob, and germinated sunflower seeds are essential, even outside the breeding season.

Summary

An Amazon parrot is a large parrot of the genus Amazona native to the New World ranging from South America to Mexico and the Caribbean.

Most Amazons are predominantly green, with accenting colors that depend on the species and can be quite vivid. Amazons, like all parrots, are zygodactyl, having four toes on each foot-two front and two back. They feed primarily on nuts and fruits, supplemented by leafy matter.

Amazons are known for their exceptional vocal abilities, playfulness, and dexterity with their feet. They are very loyal, loving companions; having them is somewhat like having a two-year-old human child in ability and temperament for 50-plus years. However, some Amazons are aggressive (usually during their mating time), and they all require a lot of attention when kept as pets. Parrots require more attention and care than domesticated pets such as dogs or cats. Parrots are highly intelligent wild animals.

While there are a number of species of birds that can be kept as cage-bird pets with little human attention, parrots must have daily attention in order to keep them mentally healthy. Parrots are not for the inexperienced bird owner. All parrots need a lot of stimulating activities to keep from being bored and terribly destructive to themselves and their surroundings. In particular, since Amazons are cavity nesters in the wild, their desire to chew wood is strong, and they need to be provided with destructible toys to satisfy this innate urge.

Amazons are actually very similar in personality to monkeys, and both animals lead similar lives back in their rainforest canopies. Amazons are very energetic, playful, social creatures that crave lots of interaction with their human owners. The best pet birds are hand-raised and have bonded early with human companions. More than other parrot species, Amazons are well known for their strong or often moody characters. They can be, at different times, cuddly, loud, quiet, stubborn, silly, jealous, playfully aggressive or irritable. They will play and fight with their toys for hours on end, even rolling over on their backs to juggle a ball or play with some string. Sometimes, however, an Amazon will temporarily become possessive of a toy, or a person, and may become quite aggressive toward anyone who tries to interfere. Careless owners have had fingers or ears bitten, followed by a trip to the hospital for stitches. This is the trickier aspect of owning an Amazon parrot, you really have to understand your bird's moods and behaviors. Amazon parrots are definitely not for all pet owners, they need much more love and attention than most people would expect. Owning an Amazon is very similar to owning a dog with wings.


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