Cape Parrot
Poicephalus robustus
The Cape parrot (Poicephalus robustus) is a large green parrot of South Africa, closely associated with Afromontane forest and yellowwood trees. It has a strong head and beak, green body, darker wings, and variable orange or reddish markings, especially on the head in many females and young birds. The species has been confused historically with related Poicephalus parrots, but modern conservation treats the South African Cape parrot as a distinct and threatened forest specialist. It feeds on seeds, fruit, flowers, and especially hard forest nuts.
Human management centers on conservation, legal captive breeding, and forest protection. Cape parrots need large flight aviaries, strong perches, chewable wood, a varied diet with suitable nuts and produce, and careful monitoring for stress and disease. Breeding should be documented because uncertain hybrids or mislabeled birds undermine conservation value. Field work includes nest monitoring, disease surveillance, protection of mature yellowwoods, and community reporting of flock movements. Buyers should be cautious: this is not a casual pet-shop parrot, and permits or trade restrictions may apply.