Red-Masked Parakeets in Lima, Peru
Red-masked parakeets have a small native range in southern Ecuador and northern Peru. However, they’ve been distributed around the world as pets, resulting in feral populations in places like California, Hawaii, and Spain.
There’s a stable population here in Lima — descendants of former pets. This is one of the world’s driest major cities, but there are plenty of heavily-irrigated parks that provide habitat and food for both native and non-native birds.
Occasionally, I see a flash of green flying overhead, or I spot this trademark “smile” in a tree:The photos below are from a small park inside a traffic circle. There were a few palm trees, each one with a pair of parakeets. It was a cute little neighborhood setting, although they were squawking at each other as if somebody’s car was parked on somebody else’s lawn.
Above, you can barely see a nesting hole in the tree. These birds are “secondary cavity nesters”, which means they move into tree cavities that were formed by other animals, like woodpeckers or termites.
Here’s one poking its head into the hole:
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