Rainbow Lorikeets are very active and noisy birds .They are vividly colored with a brilliant blue head and red bill.Their backs are bright green with a lighter collar at the top.Their fronts are orange with blue at the bottom.They can be confused with a Red-Collared Lorikeet which differs mostly in the collar color.Seeing a group of them feeding in a flowering gum tree is a stunning sight-they are not easily overlooked! ...on the left for more information and beautiful pictures of the Rainbow Lorikeet.
Rainbow Lorikeets are among the most colourful of Australia's parrots. They have a bright red beak and a vividly deep blue to violet head and abdomen. They have green wings and a green tail, and orange and yellow feathers across their breast. The tail is yellow underneath.
Males and females are indistinguishable, and neither sex is brighter than the other. They average 30cm (12 inches) from head to tail tip, and weigh an average of 133 grams.
For a photo, see the related link below.
A rainbow lorikeet is a colourful native Australian parrot, about 30 cm in length.
Bird
More specifically, a rainbow lorikeet is a colourful native Australian parrot.
rainbow lorikeets are related to parots
genus
Rainbow lorikeets live in Australia.
Rainbow lorikeets can eat apricots.
Rainbow Lorikeets are warm blooded. All birds are warm blooded.
Rainbow lorikeets grow to a length of 25 cm to 30 cm.
No. Rainbow lorikeets are considered least concern, or under no threat currently at all.
no they are not
Rainbow lorikeets are native to the the eastern coast and the northern regions of the continent of Australia.
It is unknown how many rainbow lorikeets there are in the wild. Rainbow lorikeets are extremely common in eastern Australia, New Guinea and some Indonesian islands. In Australia, it has adapted very well to urbanisation of its habitat, so is at no risk of being listed as vulnerable. A rough estimate of the world population of rainbow lorikeets suggest around five million birds.
Rainbow lorikeets live in Australia.
No
a rainbow
in the trees