HALL OF SILENT CREATURES  · FRAME 6 OF 8

The Carolina Parakeet

Conuropsis carolinensis

The only parrot of the American east, undone by its own devotion.

The Carolina Parakeet
John James Audubon, Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)  · source
EXISTED
Until 1918
WHERE
Eastern United States
LOST
21 February 1918
CAUSE OF LOSS
Shot for its feathers and as a crop pest; its loyalty made it easy to kill

The Carolina parakeet was the only parrot native to the eastern United States, a flash of green and gold and crimson in the forests of a continent not usually imagined to have parrots at all. It was killed for its bright feathers, which decorated ladies’ hats, and as a pest of orchards and grain.

Its undoing was its tenderness: when one bird was shot, the rest of the flock would not flee but wheel back to circle their fallen companions, so that a hunter could destroy an entire flock from a single spot. The last of them, a male named Incas, died in the Cincinnati Zoo in 1918, grieving (the keepers said) for his mate Lady Jane, who had died the year before, and dying, by terrible coincidence, in the same cage that had held the last passenger pigeon.

THE LAST

Incas, the last Carolina parakeet, died at the Cincinnati Zoo on 21 February 1918, in the very same cage where Martha, the last passenger pigeon, had died less than four years before.

SOURCES
MMXXVI · IN MEMORIAM RERUM AMISSARUM