Libmonster ID: NG-2617

Green tails flicker between the branches of maples. Loud cries at dawn awaken residents of residential districts. Parrots in the city? Yes, not in a pet store, not in a cage on the balcony, but wild, free, noisy flocks. For Moscow, London, Barcelona, or Tokyo, this is no longer an exoticism, but an everyday occurrence. Dozens of parrot species have colonized megacities around the world. How did they come to our latitudes? How do they survive in winter? And most importantly — should we be happy about such a neighbor?

Where did the wild parrots in the city come from

Most of the parrots living in European and Asian cities are descendants of escapees. Someone flew out an open window, someone was released by the owner, someone was lucky to escape during transportation. In the tropics, they would not survive without a flock. But in the city, with many feeders, greenery, and heat pipes, a niche was found.

The first documented case was the parrots of Kramer in London. In the 1970s, a pair of escaped birds settled in the southwest of the city. Now there are more than 30,000 individuals of this species living in London. In Moscow, the first parrots appeared in the 2010s, and now there are several hundred. In Madrid, Barcelona, and Lisbon, parrots have become as much a part of the landscape as pigeons. The main urban species are Kramer's ringed parrots (green, with a red beak and a black collar on the neck of males) and monk parrots (gray-green, with a bib-like chest).

How do parrots survive in a temperate climate

It seems that a tropical bird in Moscow or London in winter is death. But parrots are smarter than we think. First, they choose a microclimate. They nest in parks near heat pipes, on rooftops, under the roofs of shopping centers. Outside, minus ten, but under the roof, plus five. Second, they gather in large flocks and sleep closely together, warming each other. Third, they change their diet. In the summer, they eat fruits, berries, seeds. In winter, they switch to bird feeders and find unfrozen water bodies.

Monk parrots even build huge communal nests from branches — several chambers for a family. Such a nest can weigh a centner and keeps warm well. Inside, it's always plus, even if it's minus 15 outside. Scientists have recorded a survival rate of up to 90 percent in a mild winter and about 60 percent in a severe one. This is enough for the population to grow.

Kramer's parrots: the main urban conquerors

Kramer's ringed parrots are true cosmopolitans. Their native land is Africa and South Asia, but now they live in 35 countries on four continents. They are smart, omnivorous, aggressive to other species, and very noisy. The mating call of the male is audible for half a kilometer.

In Barcelona, Kramer's parrots have driven sparrows and magpies out of central parks. They occupy the holes intended for woodpeckers and destroy the nests of small songbirds. In London, they are considered an invasive species and efforts are being made to control them (sterilize eggs, shoot, but without success). In Tel Aviv, parrots have become a city legend: they gather on power lines by the thousands and their squawks interrupt traffic. In Moscow, Kramer's parrots are not aggressive yet. There are few of them, and they stay in parks along the river — in Kolomenskoye, Tsaritsyno, Bittsevsky Forest. But ornithologists warn: if the population grows to several thousand, conflict with local birds is inevitable.

Monk parrots: builders and gardeners

The second most widespread urban species is the monk parrot. It comes from South America, but it has settled well in Europe (especially in Spain, Italy, and southern France). In Spain, they are considered an agricultural pest: monks love cereal crops and descend on fields in flocks.

Their main feature is nests. Monks build multi-apartment houses from branches, which can collapse from rain and wind. Such nests put pressure on power lines, clog downspouts. In the United States, where monk parrots have also settled (for example, in Brooklyn, New York), utility services spend millions of dollars on cleaning their nests from power line poles.

In Russia, there are few monk parrots so far. But several flocks have been noted in the Krasnodar Territory and Crimea. Cases of overwintering in Moscow are rare — the climate is harsher for them than for Kramer's parrots.

Attitude of residents: love and hate

Urban parrots divide people into two camps. Some are thrilled: green, bright birds decorate gray days, they are fed by hand, filmed, posted on social networks. Parrots are tame, not afraid of people, they fly to balconies, can get into an open kitchen. In London, there are whole tours called "Parrot Tour" through parks.

Others hate them. Noise. In the morning, parrots squawk so loudly that you can't sleep. They take all small birds from feeders. They dirty cars on parking lots. They gnaw through insulation on power lines and internet cables — in Barcelona, due to parrots, there were massive internet outages. Monk parrots bite seriously: their beak is much stronger than a sparrow's, the bite can be bloody.

City authorities are wavering. Complete destruction is impossible and cruel. Complete acceptance means to accept the damage. Compromise: controlling the population without mass shooting.

What do urban parrots eat

Parrots are vegetarian with an inclination towards grain and fruit. In the city, they find a lot of food. Apples and pears in gardens, seeds of maple and chestnut, berries of rowan, hawthorn, elderberry. They eagerly peck at bread left by people (harmful to them, but they eat it). They destroy feeders created for tits and sparrows. In Spain, monks descend on rice fields. In Israel, Kramer's parrots love dates — farmers lose up to 20 percent of their harvest.

People often feed parrots on purpose. In Barcelona, mixes for ringed parrots are sold at markets. Tourists throw them cookies and chips — this is harmful, birds get fat, they develop fatty liver disease. Ornithologists ask: feed only cleaned seeds, unroasted nuts, pieces of apples and carrots. And don't overfeed.

Parrots and the city ecosystem: pros and cons

Pros: parrots spread the seeds of fruit trees. They eat a fruit, fly to another district, the seed comes out with droppings — a new garden. They help pollinate flowers (carry pollen on their beaks and chests). They destroy some pests — for example, Kramer's parrots peck at bark beetles threatening city oaks.

Cons: they displace native birds. In London, parrots have taken over the holes of large spotted woodpeckers, and woodpeckers have left central parks. They drive away magpies, tits, sparrows. They can cause damage to greenery: they gnaw on buds in spring, leaving trees without leaves. In some cities (Edinburgh, Brussels), parrots had to be shot to save rare local bird species.

There is no balanced system yet. Man has created a city environment, parrots have colonized it. And now we must decide: coexist or fight.

How to coexist with parrots in the city

If you live in a district where parrots have settled, there are rules. Don't leave windows open if there is a feeder on the balcony — parrots will fly into the apartment, be scared, break things. Strengthen the insulation of power lines on your site (special boxes). Don't feed wild parrots by hand — they lose their fear of people and start to be aggressive. Hang feeders so that the parrot cannot climb — they are bigger than sparrows, make a hole 3 cm in diameter. If a flock has settled on your site and it makes noise in the morning, try repellents — shiny ribbons, recordings of the cries of predatory birds. Don't kill — it is illegal in many countries.

If you see a wounded parrot, call the wildlife rehabilitation center. Don't treat it yourself.

Parrots in cities in Russia: specifics

The situation in Russia is different from Europe. The climate is colder, and mass colonization of parrots is still held back by cold. The main hotspots are large cities with a mild winter: Krasnodar, Rostov-on-Don, Sochi, Kaliningrad. In Moscow, there are parrots, but their population fluctuates: the severe winter of 2023-2024 destroyed almost all of them, then there were new flights. An interesting case — parrots in Novosibirsk. Several birds survived using the heat of the thermal power plant. They nest in ventilation pipes, feed on landfills and feeders. Ornithologists call this a phenomenon — a parrot lives at -30! True, there are few of them, reproduction is low, there is no talk of mass expansion.

In Russia, there is no state program for controlling parrots. They have not yet started to treat them as an invasive species officially. But the first complaints from residents about noise and damage to wires have already been received in the Rospotrebnadzor.

The future: will parrots become city pigeons 2.0

Forecast: yes. In the next 30-50 years, parrots will colonize all large cities in southern Russia, and with the warming of the climate — they will reach St. Petersburg and Nizhny Novgorod. They are smarter than pigeons, they live longer (up to 30 years), they have a high level of social organization. They have already learned to open garbage bins, remove protective nets from fruit trees, build nests on high-rise buildings.

Man will not be able to eradicate them. Shooting is ineffective, catching is expensive, poisons are dangerous for other animals. The only option is to adapt. Sterilize eggs (destroy nests and replace eggs with dummies). Remove accessible food: close garbage bins, don't leave food on the street. Strengthen power lines. And — get used to it. The cry of a parrot outside the window in 10 years will be perceived as the crowing of crows. And the green color in the branches will become familiar. Nature adapts faster than man. And parrots are a vivid proof of this.


© elib.ng

Permanent link to this publication:

https://elib.ng/m/articles/view/Parrots-in-cities

Similar publications: LFederal Republic of Nigeria LWorld Y G


Publisher:

Nigeria OnlineContacts and other materials (articles, photo, files etc)

Author's official page at Libmonster: https://elib.ng/Libmonster

Find other author's materials at: Libmonster (all the World)GoogleYandex

Permanent link for scientific papers (for citations):

Parrots in cities // Abuja: Nigeria (ELIB.NG). Updated: 25.05.2026. URL: https://elib.ng/m/articles/view/Parrots-in-cities (date of access: 26.05.2026).

Comments:



Reviews of professional authors
Order by: 
Per page: 
 
  • There are no comments yet
Publisher
Nigeria Online
Abuja, Nigeria
4 views rating
25.05.2026 (8 hours ago)
0 subscribers
Rating
0 votes
Related Articles
Birdsong in the city
Catalog: Экология 
8 hours ago · From Nigeria Online
Parental Alienation Syndrome Expertise
Catalog: Право 
10 hours ago · From Nigeria Online
Simulation of fear in a 10-year-old girl in court
Catalog: Право 
10 hours ago · From Nigeria Online
Nervous breakdown of a 10-year-old daughter in court
Catalog: Право 
13 hours ago · From Nigeria Online
Sports solidarity
20 hours ago · From Nigeria Online
Hedgehog population in the city
Catalog: Экология 
Yesterday · From Nigeria Online
Hedgehog in your garden
Catalog: Экология 
Yesterday · From Nigeria Online
Slang expression meaning "a mess" or "a mess-up."
2 days ago · From Nigeria Online
What Lenin said about the Internet
8 days ago · From Nigeria Online
Lenin and the Internet — Analysis of Fake Quotes and Folkloric Myths
8 days ago · From Nigeria Online

New publications:

Popular with readers:

News from other countries:

ELIB.NG - Nigerian Digital Library

Create your author's collection of articles, books, author's works, biographies, photographic documents, files. Save forever your author's legacy in digital form. Click here to register as an author.
Library Partners

Parrots in cities
 

Editorial Contacts
Chat for Authors: NG LIVE: We are in social networks:

About · News · For Advertisers

Nigerian Digital Library ® All rights reserved.
2023-2026, ELIB.NG is a part of Libmonster, international library network (open map)
Preserving the Nigerian heritage


LIBMONSTER NETWORK ONE WORLD - ONE LIBRARY

US-Great Britain Sweden Serbia
Russia Belarus Ukraine Kazakhstan Moldova Tajikistan Estonia Russia-2 Belarus-2

Create and store your author's collection at Libmonster: articles, books, studies. Libmonster will spread your heritage all over the world (through a network of affiliates, partner libraries, search engines, social networks). You will be able to share a link to your profile with colleagues, students, readers and other interested parties, in order to acquaint them with your copyright heritage. Once you register, you have more than 100 tools at your disposal to build your own author collection. It's free: it was, it is, and it always will be.

Download app for Android