Naretha Bluebonnet 28 cm; 74–105 g. Forehead, lores, and face purplish-blue; head, breast, mantle, back, and rump ochre shading to yellow on the belly which has a large central red blotch;
bend of wing blue with most wing-coverts olive, outermost purplish-blue; underwing-coverts and outer webs of flight-feathers purplish-blue; tail greenish bronze with outer feathers purplish blue-tipped white.
Naretha Bluebonnet Female possesses wing stripe. Immature-like female with smaller red belly patch. Race haematorrhous has a greenish turquoise bend of the wing, rufous-red wing-coverts, red from belly to vent;
pallescens like nominate but paler below; narethae has blue forehead, buff flecks on breast, olive upperparts, belly yellow with red under tail-coverts, red outer lesser wing-coverts.
Race haematorrhoa previously attributed erroneously to Gould. Race narethae may be an incipient species; this is also supported by differences in mitochondrial DNA. The remaining races intergrade to some extent. Four subspecies are recognized.
Distribution
SE Western Australia to SW South Australia
Habitat
Arid and semi-arid open woodlands dominated by Myoporum, Casuarina, Callitris, Acacia, and Eucalyptus, often with low chenopod shrub layer;
also open grassy plains, arid scrub, trees bordering watercourses, sometimes near farm buildings, water troughs. Remnant patches of mallee in cleared agricultural land are important in S of range.
Naretha bluebonnet parrot of Australia
SOURCE: Birdman Dad
Migration Overview
Seasonal fluctuations in numbers of the race narethae appear to occur, suggesting local movements in response to food availability, but otherwise no evidence of movements.
Diet and Foraging
Seeds of herbs, including Atriplex vesicarum, Kochia sedifolia, Bassia and Amaranthus, fruit, berries, and acacia blossoms; relatively little grass seed.
Race narethae recorded taking seeds of various Acacia, also Heterodendron oleifolium, Danthonia caespitosa, Helipterum, Sonchus oleraceus, and the mistletoes Amyema quandong and Lyiana exocarpi,
and Lepidoptera larvae extracted from acacia trunks; reported also to prefer seeds of composites, mainly Helipterum, when feeding young.
Sounds and Vocal Behavior
The commonest Naretha Bluebonnet call is a harsh emphatic “chack” or “chak-a-chack”, typically repeated in loose series. When perched also more melodious plaintive nasal notes.
Breeding
Jul–Dec, with some variation depending on rains, and evidence of two seasons following good rainfall. Naretha Bluebonnet Nest in a hollow in the tree;
narethae often uses very stunted trees, finding the nest site at ground level in a fissure in the tree base, with western myall (Acacia papyrocarpa) a favoured species. Eggs 4–7; incubation lasts 19 days; nestling period c. 30 days.
Conservation Status
Not globally threatened (Least Concern). CITES II. Fairly common except at the edges of the range.
Clearance of native vegetation in Victoria needs to be halted to preserve shelter and nest sites, but the spread of European Starling (Sturnus vulgaris) into Naretha Bluebonnet habitats may result in parrots being excluded from nest holes anyway.
Race narethae suffers from illegal trapping, involving the cutting-out of nest cavities, which destroys the future potential of the site and therefore reduces the Naretha Bluebonnetoverall reproductive capacity; moreover, rabbit grazing may have been preventing regeneration of favored nest tree species.