Genetic link to kakapo death

Brenda Wilson inspects her parrot, Doc, inside her Battle Ground home. The parrot’s transformation over the past decade has been amazing to watch, Wilson’s friends and family said. Photo by Zachary Kaufman BATTLE GROUND “I’m a bad bird! I’m a bad bird! I’m a bad bird!”
Doc the parrot’s deep-voiced self-assessment bounced off the walls of Brenda Wilson’s home seconds after he bit his new owner on the finger. She had unknowingly committed the cardinal sin in his world. She had threatened his “baby bell.”
Already immortalized in a book and movie, about 100 of the wild parrots from Telegraph Hill are living on the slopes of San Bruno Mountain, where they've found the juniper and hawthorn berries to their liking. Photo: Brant WardThe wild parrots of Telegraph Hill, apparently jaded by city life, have headed for the suburbs.
The budgerigar, Melopsittacus undulates, is one of several vocal-learning species of parrot, well known for its capacity to mimic human language. Image by "Fotos by Dee"By training birds to 'get rhythm', scientists uncover evidence that our capacity to move in time with music may be connected with our ability to learn speech.
Babes required surgery after having his beak knocked out of shape when it was caught in a door (left) , but he is now back to full health following his nose job Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2105905/Whos-pretty-boy-Parrot-nose-job-catching-beak-door-fixed-Polly-filler.html#ixzz1nKYoFykjA parrot who had his beak knocked out of shape after being caught in a door-frame has undergone a 'nose job'.