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hatrack

(64,220 posts)
Fri Jan 2, 2026, 07:58 AM 7 hrs ago

Ring-Necked Parakeet Population In England An Estimated 15,000 Pairs, Producing New Pressure On Native Birds

In the past 20 years, the soundscape in the ancient wild, rolling landscape of Richmond Park has been transformed. Once you would have heard the chirrup of the stonechat, the chirp of the greater spotted woodpecker or the song of the skylark. Today, the auditory power of one bird dominates. The bright green ring-necked parakeet increased 25-fold from 1994-2023 in the UK. They are still mainly based in the skies, parks, and woodlands around London and suburban areas in the south east, but in recent years they have made their way to northern cities including Manchester and Newcastle.

Richmond Park, with its rolling hectares, has become a perfect habitat for the birds, with hundreds of ancient trees providing the deep holes in the trunks that parakeets prefer to nest in, and plenty of fruits, berries, buds, and flowers to feed on. Parakeets first appeared in the UK in the late 1960s after pet birds, which originated from the Indian subcontinent and Africa, were released or escaped. Climate impacts have helped increase their numbers, and today the British Trust for Ornithology conservatively puts the population at more than 30,000 birds, in 15,000 breeding pairs, plus an unspecified number of non-breeding individuals.

The auditory dominance is hard to escape, but less clear is what impact this invasive species is having on already threatened native birds such as starlings, song thrush and lesser spotted woodpeckers, as well as bats, in the protected national nature reserve and elsewhere across the UK.

Paddy McCleave, who works with the Songbird Survival organisation, says the volume of UK-based research on the impact of ring-necked parakeets is limited and needs to be updated. However, their rapid expansion has sparked concern among scientists and conservationists. “One of the impacts of these birds is the competition they create for our native birds. Their presence, as woodpecker-sized birds, at garden feeders can cause alarm among native birds, subsequently reducing foraging behaviour and potentially increasing stress.”

EDIT

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jan/02/rapid-expansion-of-ring-necked-parakeets-in-uk-sparks-concern

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Ring-Necked Parakeet Population In England An Estimated 15,000 Pairs, Producing New Pressure On Native Birds (Original Post) hatrack 7 hrs ago OP
Yet another damaging invasive species WestMichRad 7 hrs ago #1

WestMichRad

(2,906 posts)
1. Yet another damaging invasive species
Fri Jan 2, 2026, 08:22 AM
7 hrs ago

Article also notes they’ve been observed displacing cavity nesting bats from nesting sites.

There are self-sustaining populations established in Florida, California and Hawaii. Apparently can’t survive the harsher winter conditions of most of the U.S.


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