Members of SoCal Parrot, a Jamul-based rescue group, addressed the Ocean Beach Town Council recently to enlighten residents on the history of transplanted wild parrots in OB — and, in some cases, about their endangered plight in other parts of the world where they are native. Photo by Tony de GarateFor all their squawking, the wild parrots in Ocean Beach sure seem to enjoy it around here.
And  why not? Like most of their human counterparts, the parrots are not  native. They came here from elsewhere and found Ocean Beach to their  liking. The only real difference between them and your average  out-of-towner is that when someone from New York or Chicago moves to  Southern California, he eventually kind of blends in like your average  Joe.
Not the parrots. They’ve become rock stars. Think of the  outcry that would result if, for some reason, a likeness of the iconic  critter did not appear on the entryway sign that greets travelers on  Sunset Cliffs Boulevard.
Now, that would be something to squawk about.
Yes,  the creatures annoy with their untimely chattiness. But when a regional  parrot advocate asked an audience of several dozen people if they were  fond of the birds Aug. 24 at the monthly public meeting of the Ocean  Beach Town Council, a room full of hands shot up without hesitation.
Yet  the admiration is not universal. A few months ago, an oddly  grease-covered parrot was spotted beneath a bush at Sacred Heart Church  in Ocean Beach. The wild animal was scooped up by a concerned citizen  and eventually transferred to SoCal Parrot, a Jamul-based group that  asked to address the Town Council.
An X-ray revealed the critter  had been shot once by a BB gun in a body-part area known as the flight  girdle, rendering it permanently flightless.
No one knows the  reason for the shooting. But it’s unlikely the shooter knew this: the  maimed bird — a red-crowned Amazon parrot — is a species in serious  trouble. Fewer than 5,000 exist, said Amanda Plante, SoCal Parrot’s  development and education director.
The birds are thriving  locally, but in their native northeast Mexico, populations are  collapsing. An effort is under way to have the parrots listed as an  endangered species, but so far, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service  hasn’t budged the critter from candidate status, Plante said.
As they become more abundant in Ocean Beach, Plante wants people to know of their plight and appreciate their presence here.
“You guys have the power as Obeceans and residents of southern California to save a wild species,” she said.
Southern  California hosts a few other exotic parrots that can be found in Ocean  Beach and are less threatened. But the condition of the red-crowned  Amazon has degraded to the point that there are now more birds living  outside their native habitat than in Mexico, Plante said. South of the  border, the wild populations are threatened by habitat destruction and  fragmentation and poaching, which fuels a burgeoning, black-market pet  trade.
So how did they get here? Though they have wings, they  didn’t get to Southern California by flying. Some are stowaways aboard  produce vessels, Plante said. Others were hastily released at the border  by smugglers who lost their nerve at the last minute. Still others  arrived in egg form, transported by smugglers wearing specialized shirts  with multiple pockets.
Plante dispelled the popular belief that  parrots in Ocean Beach descended from a few individuals set free by pet  owners. Some certainly did, but the sheer numbers indicate they also  were transported, she said.
Once in Ocean Beach, the birds thrive, dining on fruits of palm trees and other ornamental plants, Plante said. 
As  for the crippled bird, SoCal Parrots decided surgery to remove the BB  was too risky. The critter is being cared for as a member of the group’s  “foster flock,” Plante said.
The bird has proven to be quite ornery to its human guardians as it convalesces, which is a good sign.
“He’s  very much a wild animal. He has a lot of gumption. He does not like  people, which is a great thing. That’s the way it’s supposed to be,”  Plante said.
The group continues to be on the lookout for the well-being of the birds — even making house calls at odd hours.
“Sometimes we’ll get a call at 9:30 on a Saturday night about an injured, orphaned parrot,” Plante said. 
“There’s no one else doing what we’re doing.”