Overview
A rosella is one of five to eight species of colorful Australian parrots in the genus Platycercus. Platycercus means "broad-tailed" or "flat-tailed", reflecting a feature common to the rosellas and other members of the broad-tailed parrot tribe. Their diet is mainly seeds and fruit.
Early European settlers encountered the Eastern Rosella at Rose Hill, New South Wales, now Parramatta, and so they called it the Rosehill Parakeet, which became, "Rosehiller", and eventually "Rosella".[1]
Description
Ranging in size from 26?37 cm (10?14.5 in), rosellas are medium-sized parrots with long tails.[2][2] The feathers on their backs show an obvious scalloping appearance with coloring that differs between the species.[2] All species have distinctive cheek patches.[2] Sexual dimorphism is absent or slight - males and females generally have similar plumage, apart from the Western Rosella.[3] The juveniles of the blue-cheeked species, and Western Rosella, all have a distinctive green-based plumage, while immature plumage of the white-cheeked species is merely a duller version of the adults.[3]
Distribution and habitat
Rosellas are native to Australia and nearby islands, where they inhabit forests, woodlands, farmlands, and suburban parks and gardens. They are confined to the coastal mountains and plains and are absent from the outback. Introduced populations have also established themselves in New Zealand (notably in the North Island and in north Dunedin) and on Norfolk Island.
Behaviour and ecology
Rosellas feed predominantly on seeds and fruit, with food held in the foot. They enjoy bathing in puddles of water in the wild and in captivity.[4] Rosellas scratch their heads with the foot behind the wing.[4]
M utual preening is not exhibited by the genus, and the courtship display is simple; the male waves his tail sideways, and engages in some head bobbing, and the female reciprocates.[3]
Like most parrots, they are cavity nesters, generally nesting high in older large trees in forested areas. They generally have a clutch size of several eggs which are incubated for around 21 days by the female alone. The male feeds the female through this time and for some time after incubation concludes. Quickly covered in a white down, chicks take around five weeks to fledge.[3]
Aviculture
The more colorful rosella species are popular as pet parrots and also as aviary birds. They can live for longer than 20 years, and they are relatively easy to breed.[5] All have a reputatio n for being aggressive in captivity, and are hence recommended be kept separate from other caged birds. Their diet in aviculture includes seeds, fruit such as apple, pear, and grapes, and vegetable matter such as lettuce, grass, and silver beet.[4]
Taxonomy
The genus was described by naturalist Nicholas Aylward Vigors in 1825; the name Platycercus derived from the Ancient Greek "broad-" or "flat-tailed". The relationships with other parrots have been unclear, with the A ustralian Ringneck cited as a closest relative by some, and the genus Psephotus by others; the plumage of the Western Rosella seen as a link to the latter genus.[3]
There are, broadly speaking, three groups of rosella species. They are the blue cheeked species which includes elegans and caledonicus, the white cheeked species, eximius, adscitus and venustus and the yellow cheeked species, icterotis. The observed difference in plumage has been reinforced by molecular studies which place the icterotis as a basal offshoot.[6]
There are six species and several subspecies:[7]
Platycercus, Vigors 1825
- Platycercus caledonicus, (Gmelin
1788)
- Platycercus caledonicus brownii, (Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus caledonicus caledonicus, (Gmelin 1788)
- Platycercus elegans, (Gmelin 1788)
- Platycercus elegans elegans, (Gmelin 1788)
- Platycercus elegans flaveolus, Gould 1837
- Platycercus elegans fleurieuensis, Ashby 1917
- Platycercus elegans melanopterus, North 1906
- Platycercus elegans nigrescens, Ramsay, EP 1888
- Platycercus elegans subadelaidae, Mathews 1912
- Platycercus venustus, (Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus venustus hilli, Mathews 1910
- Platycercus venustus venustus, (Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus adscitus, (Latham
1790)
- Platycercus adscitus adscitus, (Latham 1790)
- Platycercus adscitus palliceps, Lear 1832
- Platycercus eximius, (Shaw 1792)
- Platycercus eximius diemenensis, North 1911
- Platycercus eximius elecica, Schodde & Short 1989
- Platycercus eximius eximius, (Shaw 1792)
- Platycercus icterotis, (Temminck & Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus icterotis icterotis, (Temminck & Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus icterotis xanthogenys, Salvadori 1891
Like most parrots, they are cavity nesters, generally nesting high in older large trees in forested areas. They generally have a clutch size of several eggs which are incubated for around 21 days by the female alone. The male feeds the female through this time and for some time after incubation concludes. Quickly covered in a white down, chicks take around five weeks to fledge.[3]
Aviculture
The more colorful rosella species are popular as pet parrots and also as aviary birds. They can live for longer than 20 years, and they are relatively easy to breed.[5] All have a reputation for being aggressive in captivity, and are hence recommended be kept separate from other caged birds. Their diet in aviculture includes seeds, fruit such as apple, pear, and grapes, and vegetable matter such as lettuce, grass, and silver beet.[4]< /a>
Taxonomy
The genus was described by naturalist Nicholas Aylward Vigors in 1825; the name Platycercus derived from the Ancient Greek "broad-" or "flat-tailed". The relationships with other parrots have been unclear, with the Australian Ringneck cited as a closest relative by some, and the genus Psephotus by others; the plumage of the Western Rosella seen as a link to the latter genus.[3]
There are, broadly speaking, three groups of rosella species. They are the blue cheeked species which includes elegans and caledonicus, the white cheeked species, eximius, adscitus and venustus and the yellow cheeked species, icterotis. The observed difference in plumage has been reinforced by molecular studies which place the icterotis as a basal offshoot.[6]
There are six species and several subspecies:[7]
Platycercus, Vigors 1825
- Platycercus caledonicus, (Gmelin 1788)
- Platycercus caledonicus brownii, (Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus caledonicus caledonicus, (Gmelin 1788)
- Platycercus elegans, (Gmelin 1788)
- Platycercus elegans elegans, (Gmelin 1788)
- Platycercus elegans flaveolus, Gould 1837
- Platycercus elegans fleurieuensis, Ashby 1917
- Platycercus elegans melanopterus, North 1906
- Platycercus elegans nigrescens, Ramsay, EP 1888
- Platycercus elegans subadelaidae, Mathews 1912
- Platycercus venustus, (Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus venustus hilli, Mathews 1910
- Platycercus venustus venustus, (Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus adscitus, (Latham 1790)
- Platycercus adscitus adscitus, (Latham 1790)
- Platycercus adscitus palliceps, Lear 1832
- Platycercus eximius, (Shaw 1792)
- Platycercus eximius diemenensis, North 1911
- Platycercus eximius elecica, Schodde & Short 1989
- Platycercus eximius eximius, (Shaw 1792)
- Platycercus icterotis, (Temminck & Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus icterotis icterotis, (Temminck & Kuhl 1820)
- Platycercus icterotis xanthogenys, Salvadori 1891
References
- ^ Stepnell, Kenneth; Boles, Walter. Australia's beautiful birds and their young. Sydney, Australia: Australian Consolidated Press. p. 88. ISBN 0949892130.
- ^ a b c d e Forshaw (2006). plate 53.
- ^ a b c d e Lendon, p. 169
- ^ a b c Lendon, p. 170
- ^ Alderton, David (2003). The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Caged and Aviary Birds. London, England: Hermes House. p. 185. ISBN 184309164X.
- ^ Ovenden JR, Mackinlay AG, Crozie RH (1987): Systematics and Mitochondrial Genome Evolution of Australian rosellas (Aves: Platycercidae). Molecular Biology and Evolution 4(5): 526-543. PDF fulltext
- ^ "Zoological Nomenclature Resource: Psittaciformes (Version 9.024)". www.zoonomen.net. 2009-05-30. http://www.zoonomen.net/avtax/psit.html.
- ^ a b Forshaw (2006). plate 56.
- ^ Wright D, Clout M (2001): The eastern rosella (Platycercus eximius) in New Zealand. DOC Science Internal Series 18. Department of Conservation, Wellington. 27 p (out of print) PDF fulltext
Cited texts
- Forshaw, Joseph M. (2006). Parrots of the World; an Identification Guide. Illustrated by Frank Knight. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691092516.
- Lendon, Alan H. (1973). Australian Parrots in Field and Aviary (2nd. ed). Sydney: Angus and Robertson. ISBN 0-207-12424-8.
Taxonomy
The Genus Platycercus is further organized into finer groupings including:
- Species: ZipcodeZoo has pages for 54 species and subspecies in the Genus Platycercus: P. adelaidae (Adelaide Rosella) · P. adelaide · P. adscitus (White-Cheeked Rosella) · P. adscitus adscitus · P. adscitus diemenensis · P. adscitus eximius · P. adscitus palliceps · P. barnardi (Australian Swiftlet) · P. barnardi barnardi (Mallee Ringneck) · P. barnardi macgillivrayi · P. browni · P. caledonicus (Green Rosella) · P. caledonicus brownii · P. caledonicus caledonicus (Green Rosella) · P. cookii · P. cyanogenys · P. delaidae · P. elegans (Crimson Rosella) · P. elegans adelaidae · P. elegans elegans (Crimson Rosella) · P. elegans flaveolus · P. elegans fleurieuensis · P. elegans melanoptera · P. elegans melanopterus · P. elegans nigrescens · P. elegans subadelaidae · P. eximinus · P. eximius (Eastern Rosella) · P. eximius cecilae · P. eximius ceciliae · P. eximius diemenensis · P. eximius elecica · P. eximius eximius · P. flaveolus (Yellow Rosella) · P. flaviventris · P. haematogaster · P. icterotis (Western Rosella) · P. icterotis icterotis (Western Rosella) · P. icterotis xanthogenys · P. ignitus · P. palliceps · P. rowleyi · P. scapulatus · P. semitorquatus · P. splendidus · P. unicolor · P. venustus (Northern Rosella) · P. venustus hilli · P. venustus venustus (Northern Rosella) · P. zonarius (Port Lincoln Ringneck) · P. zonarius barnardi · P. zonarius occidentalis · P. zonarius semitorquatus · P. zonarius zonarius (Port Lincoln Ringneck)
References
- ^ Stepnell, Kenneth; Boles, Walter. Australia's beautiful birds and their young. Sydney, Australia: Australian Consolidated Press. p. 88. ISBN 0949892130.
- ^ a b c d e Forshaw (2006). plate 53.
- ^ a b < sup>c d e Lendon, p. 169
- ^ a b c Lendon, p. 170
- ^ Alderton, David (2003). The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Caged and Aviary Birds. London, England: Hermes House. p. 185. ISBN 184309164X.
- ^ Ovenden JR, Mackinlay AG, Crozie RH (1987): Systematics and Mitochondrial Genome Evolution of Australian rosellas (Aves: Platycercidae). Molecular Biology and Evolution 4(5): 526-543. PDF fulltext
- ^ "Zoological Nomenclature Resource: Psittaciformes (Version 9.024)". www.zoonomen.net. 2009-05-30. http://www.zoonomen.net/avtax/psit.html.
- ^ a b Forshaw (2006). plate 56.
- ^ Wright D, Clout M (2001): The eastern rosella (Platycercus eximius) in New Zealand. DOC Science Internal Series 18. Department of Conservation, Wellington. 27 p (out of print) PDF fulltext
Sources
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