Understanding the impacts of invasive parrots

Karen Baxter
Ringneck parakeets
Ringneck parakeets by Simon Tollington

A new research network which aims to understand the problems caused by parrots that have invaded cities has been launched at Kent.

Called PARROTNET, the 4-year research network comprises of researchers from Kent’s Durrell Institute of Conservation Ecology (DICE), Imperial College, London, and other UK partners, alongside scientists from Europe and beyond. It will provide opportunities for researchers to discuss and explore the invasion dynamics, risks to agriculture, and societal problems posed by what are known as invasive parrots.

PARROTNET aims to better understand why species such as parrots are highly successful invaders. It will also explore ways to monitor and predict the various impacts, including the economic and ecological, of these species across Europe, and the means to mitigate them.

In the UK and across Europe, rose-ringed parakeets – a species of parrot – have begun to pose problems in urban and rural areas such as disturbance to humans, competition with native wildlife and, increasingly, as an agricultural pest, already prompting changes in national policies.

Rose-ringed parakeets are thought to have originally colonised the UK in the 1970s from a few escaped pet birds; now they are one of the UK’s fastest growing bird populations, numbering more than 32,000 individuals. In Kent, parakeets are well-known in areas of Margate and Broadstairs.

The network will also create a virtual European Monitoring Centre, based at the University of Kent, for all invasive parrot species, as well as transfer results to policy and society.

DICE is part of the University of Kent’s School of Anthropology and Conservation.