Cover his cage with a cover or a sheet, or put it in a dark room.
Either way the darkness will prompt him to sleep.
When they constently keep yawning
Cockatiel bird is a household bird and very easy to breed. One of their behavior is when a Cockatiel bird is hissing it means the bird feels frightened or threatened.
it depends how old the bird is if the bird is young it probably won't know how to make a nest. if the bird is older it will probably make a nest.
It varies from bird to bird but after a year the bird should have reached maturity.
A cockatiel belongs to the bird family in the animal kingdom and is most closely related to cockatoos.
It really depends on how close to the fireplace you have your cockatiel. SMOKE KILLS. Even YOU can die because of smoke inhalation. Sadly, having a cockatiel in the same room as a fireplace is not going to kill it, I tried that in the past to get mine to be quiet. However if you have them within a small area around the fireplace where the fumes are the most intense, Yes, it CAN and Will kill the bird.... so, if you are looking for a way to terminate your bird, sit the cage on the mantle, and build a very smoky fire. The bird will just go to sleep, and never awake again....
for a pet bird, i would probably say that it would be a cockatiel or a parakeet
If you hold on tight.
"Quarrion" is the Australian aboriginal word for the bird commonly known as a cockatiel.
If you mean weiro - yes (this is the other name of the cockatiel), but not werio. As long as I know, there is no bird named werio.
It means it's frightened. A cockatiel sitting with its back to you is not usually frightened, as a frightened bird is more likely to flap and cower in a corner, keeping its eyes on you, rather than turning its back to you, which would render it vulnerable to predation. If a cockatiel sits with its back to you, it can mean the bird is distressed or ill. It can also mean the bird is, quite simply, sulking. Cockatiels bond strongly to their owners, and if a new pet is introduced, or something unusual happens in the household, a cockatiel will sometimes react in a seemingly human way - by sulking.
No. The only birds that have penises are some duck and goose species. Cockatiel reproductive organs are located inside the bird's body. If a male cockatiel has a fleshy lump near or in his cloaca, he may have a tumor. You should consult your avian veterinarian if you see anything unusual on your bird's body.
Propably not. Hand-reared bird rarely get along vety well with any bird, even if it's his own specie. Even if cockatiel and conure weren't hand-reared, their size-different is too big: conure can easilly kill small-beaked cockatiel.