Cockatiel

IUCN Least Concern (LC)

About the Cockatiel

About the Cockatiel

Identification

Cockatiels are brownish-grey parrots with a wispy, gently-curved crest. Mostly brownish grey with a prominent white patch on the wings, Cockatiels have a distinctive head pattern comprising a yellow face with a bright orange ear patch, and a long grey and pale-yellow head crest. Males are brighter than females, and juveniles look like females.

Scientific name

  • Nymphicus hollandicus

Location

Conservation status (IUCN)

Identification

Songs and Calls

A ‘queel, queel’, often given in flight, is the main call. Bird call recorded by Marc Anderson.

How to identify the Cockatiel

A Cockatiel sitting on the end of a branch, its back to the camera, looking left. The bird's body is mostly brownish grey with a prominent white patch on the wings. Cockatiels have a distinctive head pattern comprising a yellow face with a bright orange ear patch. The sky is bright blue and the leaves of the tree are filling the image to the left.

IUCN Least Concern (LC)

Cockatoos and Corellas

Colour

  • Brown

Size

  • Medium (30 to 45 cm

Shape

  • Parrot

Songs & calls

Cockatiel

The main song & call.

Credits to the owner/recorder.

Habitat & distribution

Habitat

The Cockatiel usually inhabits lightly wooded grasslands and open woodlands, as well as eucalypt growing beside rivers (particularly open River Red Gum forests or Black Box or Coolibah woodlands). They also occur on partly cleared farmland.

Distribution map

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Behaviour

Behaviour

Cockatiels are gregarious throughout the year, even during breeding season, and may form flocks of hundreds or even thousands of birds, but most flocks usually have up to 30 birds.

Smaller flocks fly in tight, well-coordinated formations, but larger flocks tend to break up into smaller groups. Flocks roost communally at night.

Pairs remain together throughout the year.

Feeding

Feeding

Cockatiels mainly feed on seeds of grasses, shrubs and trees; they especially favour cereals. They mostly forage on the ground, but occasionally also in shrubs or trees.

Breeding

Breeding

Cockatiels nest in tree hollows, usually in a eucalypt, though occasionally in bulokes, and seldom in nest boxes. They may also use the old nests of other parrots. More than one pair may nest in the same tree.

They lay up to eight white eggs, though usually three to five, which are incubated by both sexes.

Once hatched, the chicks are fed by both parents, and stay in the nest hollow for about a month.

Conservation

IUCN Least Concern (LC)

  • EX
  • EW
  • CR
  • EN
  • VU
  • NT
  • LC
  • DD

IUCN status reflects the conservation status of this species globally.

Threats to the species

  1. Habitat destruction

    The permanent loss or severe degradation of natural habitat due to land clearing, urban development, agriculture, mining, or infrastructure. 
  2. Extensive or frequent fire

    Large-scale or repeatedly occurring fires that remove habitat, reduce food resources, or prevent populations from recovering between fire events. 
  3. Climate change

    Long-term changes in temperature, rainfall, sea levels, and extreme weather that alter habitats, food availability, breeding success, and survival. 
  4. Domestic animals

    Impacts from owned animals (such as cats and dogs), including predation, disturbance, or habitat degradation.

Conservation