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Other Names
Little Keet, Green Keet, Green Parakeet, Green Leek, Jerryang.
Description
Small Lorikeet with similar sexes. General body plumage is bright green with a yellow tinge on underparts. Face is red. Nape and upper mantle bronze-brown tint over green.
Tail is green with outer tail feathers bearing red markings. Underwing coverts yellow-green. eyes ornage-yellow, bill black and legs green-grey.
Females resemble males but are generally a little duller. Immatures are duller than the adults, especially in the face, with a dark olive-brown bill.
Little Lorikeets are strongly arboreal and is difficult to spot because of its size. However it is gregarious in its activities (except breeding) and is usually encountered in small
parties which may become quite fearless when feeding. These birds may also congregate into large flocks at groves of profusely flowering eucalypts.
Length: 150-155mm.
Subspecies
None.

Distribution
Eastern Australia from about Carins (Qld) to western Victroia and (formerly) the Mount Lofty Ranges (SA). It has also been recorded as a rare vagrant in Tasmania.
Habitat
Dry open woodlands and forests, also heath and banksia scrub and riverine woodland.
Diet
Mainly nectar, supplemented with pollen, fruit and seeds.
Specialised diets have been developed for lorikeets in captivity. These are pollen and nectar substitutes and a number of reputable brands are now available.
Essentially, these come in two forms; a wet mix (nectar substitute) and a dry mix (pollen substitute) both of which are essential. Although these diets are designed to provide the
essential requirements for lorikeets, they must be substituted with other foods such as fresh fruits (apples and pears, stone-fruits, most citruses, banana, melon etc.) and seed.
You will find that certain fruits are preferable to others at particular times of year (eg. citrus is preferred in summer).
Breeding
August-January.
The usual nesting site is a tree cavity at a height of around 10m, preferably in a living eucalypt near water. The nest lining is a layer of wood dust.
Only the female incubates the eggs, but both sexes feed and rear the young.
In captivity Little Lorikeets will readily nest in both logs and boxes, but for convenience it is best to use a box. These should be about 30cm x 15cm x 15cm and hung horizontally
at a slight inclination such that the eggs collect at one end of the box. Preferred nesting material is wood-dust or shavings.
Shavings should not be too coarse so as to prevent the eggs becoming buried in it.
Courtship Display
Courting males approach females stretched to their full height, but without the arching of the neck as seen in the Trichoglossus.
As he approaches, the male hops and bobs his head, meanwhile frequently wiping his bill along the perch.
There is some dilation of the pupils and a soft whistling has also been recorded during this process.
Sexual Maturity
Become fully adult and capable of breeding at 12 months of age.
Clutch
Four white rounded eggs (20mm x 17mm). Incubation period: 22 days. The young usually fledge at around 30 days.
Mutations and Hybrids
Fertile hybrids have been recorded with the Musk Lorikeet
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