Horned Parakeet
Eunymphicus cornutus
IUCN red list status:
Vulnerable
For more information, please visit iucnredlist.org
The Horned Parakeet is restricted to mountains within New Caledonia, a French territory located off the east coast of Australia in the South Pacific.
They eat seeds, nuts, berries, and buds.
Females lay a clutch of around 2-5 eggs, which are incubated for 21-23 days.
Horned Parakeets live 15 – 20 years.
Horned Parakeet
About the Horned Parakeet
The Horned Parakeet is found only in the humid pine forests of New Caledonia. This bird grows to just over 30 cm long; the females are typically smaller than the males. They have two black feathers with a red apex that sticks out from the head. It has a length that ranges from 12.5 to 13 inches. Its plumage is mainly green, and the rest of its body is yellowish-green.
Parrots are usually monogamous, which means they often stay with their breeding partner year-round, and won’t stray even when they join a larger flock. The females also sometime nest share - where two females incubate their eggs in the same nest at the same time. Small groups or pairs will madly search for food in the canopy. They normally look for seeds and nuts, as they are almost entirely vegetarian.
Did you know?
Horned Parakeets are beautifully colourful birds and are easily recognisable by their two-distinctive wispy black crest feathers, essentially providing them with their scientific name ‘cornutus’ meaning ‘horned’. The crest is unique in parrots in that it is non-moveable.