Smallest parrot ever filmed!

Normal, Weekender

THE world’s smallest parrot has been filmed in the wild for the first time, in Papua New Guinea, science publication Earth News has reported.
The tiny bird, which is not much bigger than an adult person’s thumb, is smaller than some of the insects with which it shares the forest, it said in its latest issue this month.
An expedition team, filming in PNG for the BBC programme Lost Land of the Volcano, caught two of the buff-faced pygmy parrots on camera.
Another adult, which weighs less than a gram, was also trapped by the expedition team’s bird expert.
On average, buff-faced pygmy parrots (Micropsitta pusio) stand less than 9cm tall and weigh 11.5g.
They are found across the northern lowlands of the island of New Guinea from the west to the southeastern tip, up to an altitude of around 800m.
Males and females look similar, but females have less prominent markings on the head.
The birds have green feathers with yellowish plumage on their underparts; while their cheeks, face, and crown are more buff-coloured, hence their name.
Earth News said that BBC wildlife cameraman Gordon Buchanan first discovered a tiny nest belonging to two parrots deep within pristine rainforest.
The birds nest in termite mounds, using their beaks and claws to dig their way in before laying eggs in the hole created.
Earth News editor Matt Walker wrote: “Buchanan staked out the nest from within a camouflaged hide, and was rewarded after a long wait when two birds returned.”
“He filmed the pair at their nest entrance, as the male and female reinforced their bond by rubbing against one another.
“Later, another parrot was trapped unharmed by Dr Jack Dumbacher, an ornithologist from the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, US, who had accompanied the BBC expedition team.
“Buff-faced pygmy parrots do not eat fruit and nuts but lichen and fungi.
“However, so little is still known about their dietary habits that it has proved difficult to rear the birds in captivity.”
During the expedition, the team also managed to sight a rare Salvadore’s duck (Salvadorina waigiuensis), a bird that is adapted to living in fast jungle streams.
The Salvadore’s duck, or Salvadore’s teal as it is also known, is the only duck species endemic to the island of New Guinea.
The International Union for the Conservation of Nature lists the bird as Vulnerable, and its total population may be slowly declining.
Other birds sighted included fruit doves that were completely naive to people, suggesting they had never been hunted in the past, and a king bird of paradise, with its crimson feathers, violet-coloured feet and a pair of tail streamers each ending with an emerald disc.