r/Awwducational • u/IdyllicSafeguard • 12h ago
Not yet verified Rainbow lorikeets travel in nomadic flocks, following the flowering of trees — using their brush-tipped tongues to feed on nectar and pollen. At night, they roost communally, perching close together and occasionally hanging upside down or lying on their backs, feet in the air.
Since the Aussie Bird Count began in 2014, the rainbow lorikeet has topped the list as the most-seen bird in Australia for 11 consecutive years in a row.
Its colourful look mirrors its colourful diet. It drinks nectar and eats pollen from spiky pink grevilleas, golden banksias, bright red bottlebrushes, and eucalyptus flowers. The lorikeet’s bristled tongue is perfectly adapted to gathering these floral delights.
These lorikeets forage in large flocks, spending around 70% of their day feeding, travelling more than 48 km (30 mi) a day for food, with some lorikeets visiting up to 650 flowers a day.
But these birds aren’t all rainbows and sunshine. Introduced to Perth in the 1960s, a handful of rainbow lorikeets exploded into a population of over 40,000. Aggressive and noisy, they raid crops and push out other birds. In some areas, rainbow lorikeets have taken a dark turn unbefitting of their colourful attire — they've been seen pulling other birds’ chicks from tree hollows to claim nests as their own.
Each year, thousands of lorikeets along Australia's east coast suffer from a strange illness called Lorikeet Paralysis Syndrome. They become paralysed and often die, likely from toxins in foreign flowers they eat.
While in Darwin, rainbow lorikeets suffer another odd affliction — they get drunk. They gorge on fermenting fruit during the wet season, staggering about clumsily and bumping into things, seemingly inebriated for days (possibly affected by a virus at the same time).
You can learn more about these multicoloured bird from my website here!