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1 March 2000 Suspected Zinc Toxicosis as a Cause of Sudden Death in Orange-Bellied Parrots (Neophema chrysogaster)
PETER HOLZ, JAMES PHELAN, RON SLOCOMBE, ANNE COWDEN, MICHAEL MILLER, BRETT GARTRELL
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Abstract

A syndrome of sudden death in captive orange-bellied parrots (Neophema chrysogaster) was associated with zinc toxicosis. A total of 77 birds was examined, with most being found dead in good flesh with no histologic lesions. Affected birds had a mean zinc level of 154.3 μg/g in the kidneys, 289.8 μg/g in the liver, and 723.6 μg/g in the pancreas. These values were compared with a mean zinc level of 65.3 μg/g in kidneys of unaffected birds. Additionally, the fertility rate in this population of captive parrots was 54% in 1995–96, 59% in 1996–97, and 66% in 1997–98. After all galvanized wire was replaced with nylon mesh before the 1998–99 breeding season, the fertility rate increased to 86%. Ingestion of zinc can affect the central nervous system, and birds with neurologic signs may have died as a result of colliding with walls or structures in the aviaries. The absence of histologic lesions usually associated with zinc toxicosis in affected birds may have been related to acute head trauma as the cause of death.

PETER HOLZ, JAMES PHELAN, RON SLOCOMBE, ANNE COWDEN, MICHAEL MILLER, and BRETT GARTRELL "Suspected Zinc Toxicosis as a Cause of Sudden Death in Orange-Bellied Parrots (Neophema chrysogaster)," Journal of Avian Medicine and Surgery 14(1), 37-41, (1 March 2000). https://doi.org/10.1647/1082-6742(2000)014[0037:SZTAAC]2.0.CO;2
Published: 1 March 2000
KEYWORDS
Neophema chrysogaster
orange-bellied parrots
sudden death
zinc toxicosis
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