Black Palm Cockatoos

Soon to be completed for the enjoyment of guests as they enter the DWA, is a new exhibit that will house the beautiful Black palm cockatoo.

Soon to be completed for the enjoyment of guests as they enter the DWA, is a new exhibit that will house the beautiful Black palm cockatoo (Probosciger aterrimus). In sharp contrast to the pink Moluccan cockatoo, the Black palm cockatoo is the only cockatoo with all dark feathers. They are large birds, standing 19-27 inches tall, weighing one to two pounds and having wingspans between 27-39 inches.

The beautiful, backward curving erectile crest is more than just ornamental. It is used for communicating with other birds, raising it to signal interest to a potential mate, warning and defending of its territory or just welcoming another bird. The massive top portion of the beak is larger in males than in females. The tongue is red with a black tip and the black face is highlighted with a red, naked facial marking located on both sides of the beak.

In the 1980s, it was feared that trapping of this species would lead to its decline but as of 2009, it is not considered endangered and is included in the Least Concern category by the IUCN. The Black palm cockatoos at the DWA came from the former Avicultural Breeding and Research Center in Loxahatchee FL, where more than 150 were hatched. Unlike most other parrots, the Palm cockatoo lays only one egg at a time and the chicks have proven harder to raise than other cockatoos.

The SSP program for this species commenced in 1988, with its roots in a USFW confiscation in 1983, when some of the seized birds were distributed to ten zoos throughout the US (with several zoos already housing the species). There are currently 46 Palm cockatoos distributed among 21 US collections.

They are found over the island of New Guinea, Cape York Peninsula (Australia) and a number of Indonesian islands. This is a forest species but is tolerant of logging and agriculture and continues to be common in places where the forest habitat has been degraded.