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The African grey parrot: the smartest bird?

Amazon parrot
Amazon parrot on a perch.

 

There is a lot of hubbub about what species of bird is the smartest. Some say Amazon parrots (Amazona ssp.) are the smartest, but the Congo African grey (Psittacus erithacus) wins on most people’s scorecards.

Amazons are the best talkers. They can learn up to 150 words. My Amazon could only say about five words, but he could laugh several different ways.
African greys do not only speak, but can also imitate sounds. Amazons speak in their own voice. When an African grey speaks, he can speak in your voice!

I put on PBS every morning for my African grey, but he has not learned a thing. He can ring exactly like my phone. The only way you know it’s not the phone is that he only rings once. My parrot can also sound like a smoke detector, which often scares people in my house. My neighbors must think that I burn everything I cook because my “smoke detector” goes off daily. My African grey can make fax machine noises, microwave sounds, whimper like my dog and even belch his own name! His former owners must have taught him that one.

 

African grey parrot
African grey parrot.

My parrot whistles all of the time. He knows several songs and can learn a short group of notes in just a few days. He has taught himself to whistle the little song at the end of the Lysol commercial. He even added his own flourish of whistles at the end of the song.

Just don’t curse around your African grey! They pick up on words that are emphasized. Once they learn something and get a reaction, they will continue to make that noise or say that word.

Having an African grey is like having a five year old human. They constantly crave attention. But then how can you deny them, when they are so cute!?

 

 

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Slideshow: The many moods of the African grey parrot

By

Baltimore Exotic Animals Examiner

Holli Friedland is the program director of Charm City Reptile Rescue. She has over 15 years experience working with reptiles, amphibians and...

Comments

  • robin 2 years ago
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    i think they can learn more than 150 words. i fostered an african grey named alex once (not the one that was all over the news.) i learned his name by asking hin (me: "who are you? what's your name? ... ok then i'll call you red-butt! hi red butt!" alex: "hi alex!") it did tke a few hours of coaxing, because he was stressed about the changes. he spent the rest of the day silent or immitating local birds or what sounded like spanish speaking soap operas. then i put on the movie "birdcage" starring robin williams and he spoke every sylable along with the movie! i lived with him for a few months and he made his way deep into my heart, every night i sang johnny cash's happy trails, and soon he was singing it along with me (unfortunately in my voice and pitch instead of johnny's) and if i kept him up to late he would sing a few bars as reminder of bedtime. everyone says that it it the bird that gets too attached but in this case it was me. i miss him horribly to this day and would love to have him back in my life.

  • u 2 years ago
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    yu

  • peach 2 years ago
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    Do you mean to ask the most intelligent among parrots? It's my understanding that certain crows are actually more intelligent than parrots.

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