Invasion of New York by Wild Parakeets

Invasion of New York by Wild Parakeets

Attack of the feral parakeets in New York

“These guys are tenacious,”‍ says‌ John Stalzer, of PSEG Long Island, a utility company. No matter what‌ his team ⁢does to stop them from building nests, the monk ‌parakeets prevail. The birds⁤ will find the‌ smallest gap, as teeny as a⁣ quarter of an inch ⁣(6mm), and insert a twig. “They will ⁣literally build off a twig and ​build their‌ nests,”⁢ says Mr Stalzer, an environment specialist. “We should hire them as ⁤engineers.” ⁤The nests⁣ can be ten feet (three metres) in diameter , apartment⁢ buildings for the feathered set. When the birds expand their nests around electrical ‍equipment, which ​keeps them warm, they can cause power‌ cuts⁤ and⁤ sometimes fires. ⁢Since May 2021 ⁤they​ have knocked out power for 41,000 ⁤customers on Long ⁤Island.

Monk parakeets, also‌ known as Quaker parakeets, come‌ from Argentina, where they are pests to⁢ farmers. But ‍they look cute and ‌are⁢ sociable, so lots were ⁢exported. Birds now ‌breed in more than 20 states,‍ including‌ cold spots like Chicago. Stephen Pruett-Jones, a professor of⁣ ecology and evolution at ⁣the University of Chicago, says most​ of the colonies ⁢in America are probably descendants of escaped or released ⁢pets (another theory, almost ⁤certainly not true, is ⁢that the wife of a pet-shop ​owner released all⁣ the pet ‌parakeets after a bitter divorce).

America⁣ has⁤ about 50,000⁣ non-native plant​ and animal species. About one in‍ nine of those ⁢species has become invasive. Their cost is huge—estimates of the damage run ⁢to $120bn a year.

2023-06-15 08:20:26
Post from www.economist.com
‍ rnrn

Exit mobile version