911 Parrot Alert Logs Multiple Lost Parrot Reports Across North America
911 Parrot Alert logged multiple lost parrot reports across North America Jan 12-16, 2026, a surge owners and local rescues should monitor and share.

The 911 Parrot Alert lost-bird database recorded a cluster of companion parrot reports posted January 12-16, 2026, spanning Florida, New York, California and other North American communities. Entries include a Blue-Crowned Conure reported lost in Miramar, FL on January 13, a Quaker parrot named Shakira reported lost in Oakland Park, FL on January 13, a grey cockatiel missing in South Richmond Hill, NY on January 16, and an Eclectus reported missing in Cerritos, CA on January 15, among multiple other listings.
These listings carry practical details useful for owners, finders, and rescue groups: species, rough location and date are included on each post, and individual listing pages most commonly contain contact and reward information. For people searching for a missing bird or for volunteers organizing canvasses, those particulars narrow search areas and give immediate next steps - who to call and whether a reward may be offered.
The timing matters for on-the-ground recovery. Flighted birds can travel blocks or miles within hours, and reports concentrated across a short window increase the chance that a local finder or shelter may see a listing and make the link. The aggregation of local reports into a single database also helps coordinate efforts between neighborhood loss-and-found groups, bird rescues, and avian-savvy shelters that may not otherwise cross-post.

Practical actions to take now include checking the site’s individual listing pages for up-to-date contact and reward details, subscribing to the RSS feed to receive new postings as they go live, and sharing relevant entries in neighborhood loss-and-found and parrot care groups on social platforms. If you are conducting a search, canvass the immediate block for hiding spots and call or whistle frequently; post clear photos and identifying traits from your own bird’s records to match the database entries. Rescues and rescuer volunteers can use the aggregated listings to avoid duplicate postings and to cross-check sightings reported to shelters.
The community benefits when information flows fast and accurately. Local networks that repost listings, keep walk-and-listen teams active, and verify microchip and wing-clipping details improve recovery odds for lost companions. As these January reports show, losses can pop up in disparate places in a short time - stay alert, pull the latest posts from the RSS feed, and amplify any match in local channels so birds and caregivers reconnect as quickly as possible.
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