iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Will Travers

GET UPDATES FROM Will Travers
 

Cee Lo Green's Cockatoo Exploitation

Posted: 06/29/2012 6:42 pm

NBC Television's popular show The Voice is employing a Moluccan cockatoo to accompany Cee Lo Green.

As far as I'm concerned, this kind of animal exploitation doesn't fly.

By showing a cockatoo perched on a celebrity's shoulder, NBC is giving viewers the mistaken impression that these animals make good pets -- or that they should be pets at all. Some viewers might even be inspired to "own" one too, thereby leading to increased trade in wild-caught Moluccan cockatoos in their country of origin and abroad. Owning a pet cockatoo is a huge problem.

For better or for worse, the actions of celebrities have a major impact on trends... what to wear, who to wear, what to buy, and what animal companions to have. We see this all the time. The last thing this particular species needs is promotion as a "pet" and an increase in sales.

Nearly the entire remaining population of Moluccan cockatoos is found on the tiny island of Seram in Eastern Indonesia. The population has declined as a direct result of their popularity as pets, which has led to severe trapping for trade.

My colleague at Born Free USA, Monica Engebretson, has twice traveled to the island of Seram for parrot conservation projects, and has seen first-hand the challenges this species faces.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service added the Moluccan cockatoo (Cacatua moluccensis) under the protection of the Endangered Species Act in May 2011, and the birds have been on CITES (Convention on International Trade in Wild Fauna and Flora) Appendix I since the 1990s. This action has curtailed reported trade at the international level, but has not eliminated the trade. In fact, Moluccan cockatoos remain one of the more sought-after birds for private ownership. They are traded within Indonesia and are still smuggled to outside markets that include Malaysia and Singapore.

Not only does the pet trade threaten wild populations. It also threatens the welfare of individual cockatoos whether wild-caught or captive-bred.

Moluccan cockatoos are beautiful, intelligent animals, but they are very challenging to care for -- especially long-term -- and are prone to considerable welfare problems. Many develop self-destructive behaviors, such as feather-plucking and self-mutilation, that are not known to occur in the wild. Many bird rescue organization already are filled to capacity with Moluccans and other large parrots.

Then there is the issue of whether it is even worth breeding these birds in captivity. Contrary to popular belief, captive breeding does not contribute to conservation efforts because most of it is done outside of official species survival plans or other directed conservation efforts.

There is no captive breeding release program for Moluccan cockatoos. Captive parrot breeding release programs are notoriously difficult and often fail. To have any reasonable expectation for success, such a program needs to occur in the birds' native country and in close proximity to native habitat and wild-free living cockatoos.

There is also something else to consider. Even when bred in captivity, exotic birds are not considered domesticated animals. They are the native species of other countries and, as such, all of their inherent behavioral and physical needs remain intact. Sadly, when it comes to birds, deprivation of their natural behaviors (to fly and flock, for example) is an inescapable component of their captivity.

Born Free USA encourages NBC, Cee Lo and The Voice to reconsider featuring a Moluccan cockatoo or any bird on the show. We believe that featuring a more appropriate companion animal, such as a dog, would be a better choice, and that featuring a rescue dog or a dog in need of a home would be doubly beneficial.

Keep Wildlife in the Wild -- including Moluccan cockatoos. Give THEM a voice!

Will Travers
CEO Born Free USA

 
FOLLOW TV
NBC Television's popular show The Voice is employing a Moluccan cockatoo to accompany Cee Lo Green. As far as I'm concerned, this kind of animal exploitation doesn't fly. By showing a cockatoo per...
NBC Television's popular show The Voice is employing a Moluccan cockatoo to accompany Cee Lo Green. As far as I'm concerned, this kind of animal exploitation doesn't fly. By showing a cockatoo per...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 17
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
Catfish1968
I live in a river of mud
06:15 AM on 07/10/2012
This reminds me of how Petco but Hawaiian reef fish from unscrupulous businesses who strip the reefs of their fish so someone can have it in their home.
10:49 AM on 07/04/2012
Efforts should be made to protect the natural habitats of parrots, and parrot ownership should be discouraged. I grew up with an aviary full of birds and still have two old parrots ( one in his 40's, the other 50 ). I give them attention and feed them well, but birds should be free to fly and live with others of their kind. They can not be mentally healthy in captivity.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
threnodymarch
Art is long, life is short.
11:40 AM on 07/02/2012
A reasonble, well-put argument that caters to facts and natural science over emotion. I completely agree.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
urbancitygirl
Making it through the world as a moderate...
01:30 AM on 07/02/2012
I agree. I know it's hard to remain interesting in a media saturated culture. He should've put a fake bird on his shoulder. That would've been clever, unique, replicable and most important... Merchandisable!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Parade Keegan
I Can Hear You
09:43 AM on 07/01/2012
Here's the deal, these birds are huge and they can snap off a persons finger as quick as they can rip a persons face off.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
doodoopapah1
For me to poop on!
11:18 PM on 06/30/2012
Agree with author. Cee Lo just makes owning an exotic pet (which birds they are)...fashionable. They can be great pets,...IF you are able to give them 24/7 attention, which most people can't, and that does not mean having someone on your staff look out for it. They "Mate" with one person.....it myust be one person for them to have a decent life. Cee Lo is off base here.
06:09 PM on 06/30/2012
The argument of continuing the pet trade in order to save endangered species doesn't hold water. First of all, it almost guarantees extinction in the wild, as "collectors" vie for the rarest and most expensive. Hundreds, thousands, die in mass shipments, legal & illegal, to supply that market. Secondly, few or none of those birds will EVER be returned to the wild - they will not know all the complex behaviours required for survival, and only the most professional expertise will make that possible. Then there is the consideration of quality of life - we need re-evaluate keeping creatures whose life is flight, and in flocks, in barren cages alone. I hope the time is coming when we start to realize how much we diminish these magnificent creatures by owning them - and we value them enough to maintain or recover their original and natural homes.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
08:01 AM on 06/30/2012
That's one side of the argument. For the other side one could look at the current circumstances of a far more critically endangered parrot, Ara glaucogularis, the Blue Throated Macaw. In the wilds of their extremely limited range in Bolivia there are an estimated 100-300 individuals left. Due to continued destruction of their rather unique biotope for agricultural purposes the long term prognosis is not good for the species' survival. In the wild that is. However due to importations in the 1970s, and the relative ease of captive breeding, there are currently many thousands in private hands, my own included. Without the pet trade this bird would be nearly in the same boat as Spix's Macaw, Cyanopsitta spixii, down to a handful of individuals in the whole world.
12:51 PM on 06/30/2012
My question to you is do you realize how long parrots live?? You being human can live to 100 or more years. Now imagine living that whole time in a prison room where you can barely spread out your arms. 100% dependent on someone feeding you, playing with you and then finally getting tired of you complaining, crying and then screaming because all you want is companionship from your caretaker. Then you are sold because they don't want to deal with you anymore and you don't understand.

This is what these birds go through everyday of their lives. Birds are meant to be in the wild and they are meant to fly. I personally would rather see these birds conserved in the wild than in captivity. If they go extinct at least they won't be locked in a small cage pulling out their feathers ripping open their on skin because that is the only way they know how to play and entertain themselves.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Seaglass
04:23 PM on 06/30/2012
Being in the wild is great...assuming that there's any safe habitat left. For too many species of parrot, there simply isn't due to human encroachment. Captive-breeding programs are important, and not every bird is being "exploited." Your assertion that letting them become extinct is absurd--they aren't declining in numbers due to natural causes. Hello, humans have done it, so preventing their extinction is hardly cruel, as you seem to think. You're painting with too broad a brush here.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
02:40 PM on 07/02/2012
How dare you presume to know how my parrot lives!