They love apples, banana and all common fruits...
However DONT FEED THEM avocado or other stone fruits.
Rainbow lorikeets are not predators, so they do not prey on anything. Rainbow lorikeets feed on nectar and pollen from inside flowers. They also eat various fruits, especially native fruits, and they feed on some types of seeds.
Rainbow lorikeets can eat apricots.
Lorikeets cannot be given meat, whether fresh or tinned, or meat, chicken or fish. They can eat everything else. There are no fruits, berries or vegetables that are poisonous to them, except for onions and some varieties of avocado, which are toxic to birds and animals. Naturally, there will be some plants (such as oleanders) that they will instinctively shy away from.
yes
Lorikeets, including the well-known Rainbow lorikeet, have tiny hair-like brushes on the tip of their tongue. These hairs help the bird to soak up nectar and pollen from inside flowers, which is what they mostly feed on (although not exclusively). They also eat various fruits, especially native fruits, and they feed on some types of seeds. Rainbow lorikeets travel and feed in flocks. They can often be seen hanging from the branches, twigs and flower-heads of native trees and shrubs, especially callistemon and grevillea. They commonly feed in the early morning and late afternoon.
Techcnically no, But some scientest believe they eat mice.
Rainbow lorikeets have tiny hair-like brushes on the tip of their tongue. These hairs help the bird to soak up nectar and pollen from inside flowers, which is what they mostly feed on (although not exclusively). They also eat various fruits, especially native fruits, and they feed on some types of seeds. Rainbow lorikeets travel and feed in flocks. They can often be seen hanging from the branches, twigs and flower-heads of native trees and shrubs, especially callistemon and grevillea. They commonly feed in the early morning and late afternoon.
No. Rainbow lorikeets are native to Australia. There are no wild rainbow lorikeets in the Amazon rainforest.Rainbow lorikeets live in a variety of habitats, and not restricted to rainforests. Besides rainforests, they live in bushland, and are also common in suburbia, feeding on the native plants in people's backyards.
Lorikeets are herbivorous creatures. They have tiny hair-like brushes on the tip of their tongue. These hairs help the bird to soak up nectar and pollen from inside flowers, which is what they mostly feed on (although not exclusively). They also eat various fruits, especially native fruits, and they feed on some types of seeds. They are, quite simply, not made to eat or digest meat.
No. The typical diet of a rainbow lorikeet consists of fruit, pollen and nectar.
Rainbow lorikeets in the wild are particularly subject to predation by the common domestic cat. Other predators include various Birds of Prey, while goannas will eat birds' eggs.
There is no specified collective noun for lorikeets, in which case, a collective noun that suits the situation is used; for example, a family of lorikeets, a bunch of lorikeets, a group of lorikeets, etc.