Sergio Alvarado’s research while affiliated with University of Santiago Chile and other places

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Publications (1)


Cont.
Eight tree species where we found Monk Parakeets nests in La Reina and represented in the municipality's census (available versus observed). Abundance and proportion of trees are compared to confidence intervals to test for Monk Parakeet selectivity. Pi = Proportion of trees of the i species. CI = Confidence interval.
Monk Parakeet’s (Myiopsitta monachus) Ecological Parameters after Five Decades of Invasion in Santiago Metropolis, Chile
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October 2022

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7 Citations

Birds

Cristóbal Briceño

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Sergio Alvarado

Monk Parakeets are considered one of the most invasive bird species given its unique capacity among psittacines to build their own communal nests. Originally introduced as pets in houses from where they escaped or were released, they are currently considered invasive in more than 20 countries worldwide. This is the case in Chile, where Monk Parakeets were introduced during the 1970s. Between 2016 and 2019 we searched Monk Parakeets’ nests structures in the Santiago metropolis region. We identified 1458 Monk Parakeets’ communal nests on 546 trees belonging to 34 tree species. Ninety-one percent of the occupied trees were also introduced. Paraná pine and cedar of Lebanon were the tree species with highest abundance of nests, averaging more than four nests/tree/species, with 23 and 18 maximum number of nests, respectively. Tasmanian blue gum and black locust were selected by parakeets more often than expected, based on availability. From all trees, 24.6% denoted health problems and 47.3% were pruned. The average nest height was 14.2 m and nests were observed mainly in secondary branches (59.3%). The occupancy rate was 89.7% and was associated to nest height and type of branch. During two reproductive seasons we quantified eggs and nestlings in chambers averaging 4.5 and 4.2, respectively. We provide a rough population size estimate and the characteristics of Monk Parakeets nest and tree selectivity, aiming to characterize several decades of a neglected urban invasion to warrant strategies for improved management measures.

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Citations (1)


... Nesting reports of Myiopsitta monachus were frequently associated with groves and urban structures, such as antennas, constructions, buildings, towers, light poles, transformers, public lighting poles, water tanks, and windmills. Some of these substrates have also been mentioned by different authors [95][96][97][98][99] and possible strategies have been exposed in the event of possible damage caused by the location of the nests in structures used for supplying electricity in different cities [100,101]. Moreover, the nesting substrates reported for Cyanoliseus patagonus were cavities in rural, urban and semi-urban ravines and cliffs, mostly in quarries formed by the extraction of sediments and substrates for construction, generally located in the vicinity of the urban area, in addition to records of nesting in holes in the walls of buildings [102][103][104]. ...

Reference:

Urban Parrots in Southern South America: Challenges and Opportunities
Monk Parakeet’s (Myiopsitta monachus) Ecological Parameters after Five Decades of Invasion in Santiago Metropolis, Chile

Birds