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Australian ringneck

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Australian ringneck
File:Port Lincoln parrot at Augusta profile.jpg
Intermediate between B. z. zonarius and B. z. semitorquatus near Augusta, Western Australia
Scientific classification
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Genus:
Barnardius

Bonaparte, 1854
Species:
B. zonarius
Binomial name
Barnardius zonarius
(Shaw, 1805)
Subspecies

B. z. zonarius
B. z. semitorquatus
B. z. barnardi
B. z. macgillivrayi

Synonyms

Barnardius barnardi (Vigors & Horsfield, 1827)

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The Australian ringneck (Barnardius zonarius) is a parrot native to Australia. Except for extreme tropical and highland areas, the species has adapted to all conditions. Traditionally, two species were recognised in the genus Barnardius, the Port Lincoln parrot (Barnardius zonarius) and the mallee ringneck (Barnardius barnardi),[2] but the two species readily interbred at the contact zone and are now considered one species.[3][4] Currently, four subspecies are recognised, each with a distinct range.

In Western Australia, the ringneck competes for nesting space with the rainbow lorikeet, an introduced species. To protect the ringneck, culls of the lorikeet are sanctioned by authorities in this region. Overall, though, the ringneck is not a threatened species.

Description

The subspecies of the Australian ringneck differ considerably in colouration.[2] It is a medium size species around 33 cm (11 in) long. The basic colour is green, and all four subspecies have the characteristic yellow ring around the hindneck; wings and tail are a mixture of green and blue.

The B. z. zonarius and B. z. semitorquatus subspecies have a dull black head; back, rump and wings are brilliant green; throat and breast bluish-green. The difference between these two subspecies is that B. z. zonarius has a yellow abdomen while B. z. semitorquatus has a green abdomen; the latter has also a prominent crimson frontal band that the former lacks (the intermediate shown in the box has characteristics of both subspecies).[5] The two other subspecies differ from these subspecies by the bright green crown and nape and blush cheek-patches. The underparts of B. z. barnardi are turquoise-green with an irregular orange-yellow band across the abdomen; the back and mantle are deep blackish-blue and this subspecies has a prominent red frontal band. The B. z. macgillivrayi is generally pale green, with no red frontal band, and a wide uniform pale yellow band across the abdomen.[5]

The calls of the mallee ringneck and Cloncurry parrot have been described as "ringing",[5] and the calls of the Port Lincoln ringneck and twenty-eight have been described as "strident".[5] The name of the twenty-eight parrot is an onomatopoeic derived from its distinctive 'twentee-eight' call (or 'vingt-huit', from an early French description).[6]

File:Australian Ringneck Parrot.ogg
Call of the Australian ringneck

Taxonomy and naming

The Australian ringneck was first described by the English naturalist George Shaw in 1805. It is a broad-tailed parrot and related to the rosellas of the genus Platycercus; it has been placed in that genus by some authorities, including Ferdinand Bauer.[7]

Currently, four subspecies of ringneck are recognised, all of which have been described as distinct species in the past:[4][8] (As of 1993, the twenty-eight and Cloncurry parrot were treated as subspecies of the Port Lincoln parrot and the mallee ringneck, respectively).[5]

Several other subspecies have been described, but are considered synonyms with one of the above subspecies. B. z. occidentalis has been synonymised with B. z. zonarius.[9] Intermediates exist between all subspecies except for between B. z. zonarius and B. z. macgillivrayi.[4][10] Intermediates have been associated with land clearing for agriculture in southern Western Australia.[10]

The classification of this species is still debated, and molecular research by Joseph and Wilke in 2006 found that the complex split genetically into two clades—one roughly correlating with B. z. barnardi and the other with the other three forms; B. z. macgillivrayi was more closely related to B. z. zonarius than to the neighbouring B. z. barnardi. The researchers felt it was premature to reorganise the classification of the complex until more study was undertaken.[4]

Subspecies

Subspecies
Common and binomial names Image Description Range
Twenty-eight parrot
500x180px
Identification: The red band and green belly distinguishes it from the Port Lincoln parrot. Found in the south western forests of coastal and subcoastal Western Australia.[11]
B. z. semitorquatus
(Quoy & Gaimard, 1830)
Port Lincoln parrot or
Port Lincoln ringneck
500x180px
Common from Port Lincoln in the south east to Alice Springs in the north east, and from the Karri and Tingle forests of South Western Australia up to the Pilbara district.[12]
B. z. zonarius
(Shaw, 1805)
Cloncurry parrot
500x180px
Identification: The yellow belly, lighter green colour and lack of red band distinguishes it from the mallee ringneck. Found from the Lake Eyre basin in the Northern Territory to the Gulf Country of northwestern Queensland, from Burketown south to Boulia, with Kynuna and Camooweel as eastern and western limits respectively.[13]
B. z. macgillivrayi
(North, 1900)
Mallee ringneck
500x180px
Inhabits central and western New South Wales west of Dubbo, the southwestern corner Queensland west of St George, eastern South Australia and northwestern Victoria.[14]
B. z. barnardi
(Vigors & Horsfield, 1827)

Behaviour

The Australian ringneck is active during the day and can be found in eucalypt woodlands and eucalypt-lined watercourses. The species is gregarious and depending on the conditions can be resident or nomadic. In trials of growing hybrid eucalypt trees in dry environments parrots, especially the Port Lincoln parrot, caused severe damage to the crowns of the younger trees during the research period between 2000–3.[15]

Feeding

This species eats a wide range of foods that include nectar, insects, seeds, fruit, and native and introduced bulbs. It will eat orchard-grown fruit and is sometimes seen as a pest by farmers.[2][16]

Breeding

Breeding season for the northern populations starts in June or July, while the central and southern populations breed from August to February, but this can be delayed when climatic conditions are unfavourable. The nesting site is a hollow in a tree trunk.[17] Generally four or five white oval eggs are laid measuring 29 mm x 23 mm, although a clutch may be as few as three and as many as six.[18] Fledgling survival rates have been measured at 75%.[19]

Conservation

Although the species is endemic,[20] the species is considered not threatened,[1] but in Western Australia, the twenty-eight subspecies (B. z. semitorquatus) gets locally displaced by the introduced rainbow lorikeets that aggressively compete for nesting places.[21] The rainbow lorikeet is considered a pest species in Western Australia and is subject to eradication in the wild.[22]

In Western Australia, a licence is required to keep or dispose of more than four Port Lincoln ringnecks.[23] All four subspecies are sold in the Canary Islands and in Australia,[23] and they are traded via the CITES convention.[24] The sale of the Cloncurry parrot is restricted in Queensland.[25] The Australian ringneck can suffer from psittacine beak and feather disease, which causes a high nestling mortality rate in captivity.[26]

References

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  3. Christidis, L. & Boles, W.E. (1994). The Taxonomy and Species of Birds of Australia and its Territories. Hawthorn East, Victoria : Royal Ornithologists Union Monograph Vol. 2 112 pp.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Joseph, L. & Wilke, T. 2006. Molecular resolution of population history, systematics and historical biogeography of the Australian ringneck parrots Barnardius: are we there yet? Emu 106: 49-62
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Field Guide to the Birds of Australia - A book of identification Simpson and Day, (1993) pp.144 ISBN 0-670-90670-0
  6. Managing bird damage to fruit and other horticultural crops. Part B: Fact sheets for growers NSW Department of Primary Industries. Accessed 6 August 2013.
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  9. Schodde, R. & Mason, I.J. (1997) Aves (Columbidae to Coraciidae). In, Houston, W.W.K. & Wells, A. (eds) Zoological Catalogue of Australia. Melbourne: CSIRO Publishing, Australia Vol. 37.2 xiii 440 pp.
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  11. Lendon, p. 166
  12. Lendon, p. 161
  13. Lendon, p. 157
  14. Lendon, p. 152-52
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Cited text

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Further reading