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Crimson Rosella

Platycercus elegans

Description:

There are several colour forms of the Crimson Rosella. The form it is named for has mostly crimson (red) plumage and bright blue cheeks. The feathers of the back and wing coverts are black broadly edged with red. The flight feathers of the wings have broad blue edges and the tail is blue above and pale blue below and on the outer feathers. Birds from northern Queensland are generally smaller and darker than southern birds. The 'Yellow Rosella' has the crimson areas replaced with light yellow and the tail more greenish. The 'Adelaide Rosella' is intermediate in colour, ranging from yellow with a reddish wash to dark orange. Otherwise, all the forms are similar in pattern. Young Crimson Rosellas have the characteristic blue cheeks, but the remainder of the body plumage is green-olive to yellowish olive (occasionally red in some areas). The young bird gradually attains the adult plumage over a period of 15 months

Habitat:

Throughout its range, the Crimson Rosella is commonly associated with tall eucalypt and wetter forests.

Notes:

Feeding: Crimson Rosellas are normally encountered in small flocks and are easily attracted to garden seed trays. Once familiar with humans, they will accept hand held food. Natural foods include seeds of eucalypts, grasses and shrubs, as well as insects and some tree blossoms. Breeding: The Crimson Rosella's nest is a tree hollow, located high in a tree, and lined with wood shavings and dust. The female alone incubates the white eggs, but both sexes care for the young. The chicks remain dependent on their parents for a further 35 days after leaving the nest.

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3 Comments

nexttogone
nexttogone 11 years ago

Beautiful shots!

lori.tas
lori.tas 11 years ago

They're just amazingly colored.

LeanneGardner
LeanneGardner 11 years ago

Such beautiful Aussie birds :)

MacChristiansen
Spotted by
MacChristiansen

2420, New South Wales, Australia

Spotted on Sep 6, 2008
Submitted on Sep 20, 2012

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