HK scientist puts hope in nest boxes to save endangered cockatoos

Sharon Kwok Pong, founder of the Hong Kong Parrot Rescue, showing a leg ring bearing the birth date of "Winnie", a rescued yellow-crested cockatoo, during an interview with AFP in Hong Kong. (AFP)
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Updated 19 August 2025
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HK scientist puts hope in nest boxes to save endangered cockatoos

  • Their future now hangs in the balance, due to habitat loss and, some suspect, a black market for the rare birds

HONG KONG: Above the teeming shopping streets of Hong Kong’s Causeway Bay district, a fight to save one of the world’s most endangered species is unfolding high in the branches of a decades-old cotton tree.
Nestled among its sprawling boughs is a nest box designed for the yellow-crested cockatoo, of which only 1,200 to 2,000 remain in the world.
Although the birds are native to East Timor and Indonesia, one-tenth of those left are found in Hong Kong — one of the “largest cohesive remaining wild populations” globally, according to Astrid Andersson, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Hong Kong.
Their future now hangs in the balance, due to habitat loss and, some suspect, a black market for the rare birds.
The cockatoos’ numbers have stagnated, with far fewer juveniles than when Andersson began monitoring almost 10 years ago.
The birds don’t make their own nests but depend on natural cavities in trees — about 80 percent of which have vanished in recent years, because of typhoon damage and government pruning.
The nest boxes set up by Andersson are an attempt to rectify this, designed to resemble the hollows sought out by the birds.
She plans to place about 50 around the city.
“Without the nest boxes, I believe that the cockatoos will have fewer and fewer opportunities to increase or replace individuals that die in their population,” she said.
The boxes will also allow observation of their reproductive behavior, which has never been comprehensively studied.

The cockatoos’ existence in Hong Kong has been “a very positive story about human-wildlife coexistence,” said Andersson.
The population in Hong Kong is an introduced one, with one urban legend recounting they originated from an aviary set free by the British governor of Hong Kong before surrendering to the Japanese in 1941.
There is no evidence to support that story, however — the modern flock’s ancestors are in fact believed to be escaped pets.
Hong Kong’s urban parks, full of mature trees bearing fruit, nuts and other food, became a “sanctuary” for them, Andersson said.
The cockatoos are now part of the city’s fabric, their loud squawks echoing through the sky at nightfall.
Perched on streetlights, they sit calmly observing the humming traffic along city flyovers.
Many people don’t realize they are looking at an endangered species in their neighborhood.
“We genuinely thought they were just like an average parakeet,” resident Erfan, who lives near a flyover, told AFP.
Yellow-crested cockatoos are often mistaken for sulfur-crested cockatoos, commonly found in Australia rummaging through bins.
The two are genetically distinct though, and the Australian species is not endangered.

Merchants at Hong Kong’s bird market certainly know the difference.
When AFP visited, sulfur-crested cockatoos were openly displayed, while yellow-crested ones were only shown upon request.
A one-year-old bird was being sold for a whopping HK$56,000 ($7,000), while a two-month-old chick could sell for HK$14,000.
It has been illegal since 2005 to trade wild-caught yellow-crested cockatoos.
Selling ones bred in captivity is allowed, but the breeders must have valid licenses under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
There are no such registered breeders in Hong Kong.
Sharon Kwok Pong, founder of Hong Kong Parrot Rescue, believes there may be a “black market.”
“There have been people that find out where these birds are, they raid them,” she told AFP.
Captive-bred cockatoos should have a ring on their leg and documentation proving their origin, but these can be falsified.
“I think we need a crackdown,” Kwok said.
“If you want to protect a species, so unique in this environment, I think a lot of things need to fall into place.”

Andersson has developed a forensic test that analyzes a cockatoo’s diet to determine whether it was recently taken from the wild.
She hopes this will help enforce the ban on illegal sales.
In their native habitats, poaching, rapid habitat loss and climate change have devastated the cockatoos’ numbers.
The financial hub’s birds may one day be able to help revive them.
“Hong Kong’s population could have genetic lineages that are now gone,” she said.
It could function “as a backup population for the wild Indonesian counterparts.”


ABC signs Jimmy Kimmel to a one-year contract extension, months after temporary suspension

Updated 09 December 2025
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ABC signs Jimmy Kimmel to a one-year contract extension, months after temporary suspension

President Donald Trump won’t be getting his wish. ABC said Monday it has signed late-night comic Jimmy Kimmel to a one-year contract extension.
Kimmel’s previous, multiyear contract had been set to expire next May, so the extension will keep him on the air until at least May 2027.
Kimmel’s future looked questionable in September, when ABC suspended “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” for remarks made following the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Following a public outcry, ABC lifted the suspension, and Kimmel returned to the air with much stronger ratings than he had before.
He continued his relentless joking at the president’s expense, leading Trump to urge the network to “get the bum off the air” in a social media post last month. The post followed Kimmel’s nearly 10-minute monologue on Trump and the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Kimmel was even on Trump’s mind Sunday as the president hosted the Kennedy Center Honors in Washington.
“I’ve watched some of the people that host,” Trump said. “I’ve watched some of the people that host. Jimmy Kimmel was horrible, and some of these people, if I can’t beat out Jimmy Kimmel in terms of talent, then I don’t think I should be president.”
Kimmel has hosted the Oscars four times, but he’s never hosted the Kennedy Center show.
Just last week, Kimmel was needling Trump on the president’s approval ratings. “There are gas stations on Yelp with higher approval ratings than Trump right now,” he said.
Kimmel will be staying longer than late-night colleague Stephen Colbert at CBS. The network announced this summer it was ending Colbert’s show next May for economic reasons, even though it is the top-rated network show in late-night television.
ABC has aired Kimmel’s late-night show since 2003, during a time of upheaval in the industry. Like much of broadcast television, late-night ratings are down. Viewers increasingly turn to watching monologues online the day after they appear.
Most of Kimmel’s recent renewals have been multiyear extensions. There was no immediate word on whose choice it was to extend his current contract by one year.
Following Kirk’s killing, Kimmel was criticized for saying that “the MAGA gang” was “desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it.” The Nexstar and Sinclair television ownership groups said it would take Kimmel off the air, leading to ABC’s suspension.
When he returned to the air, Kimmel did not apologize for his remarks, but he said he did not intend to blame any specific group for Kirk’s assassination. He said “it was never my intention to make the light of the murder of a young man.”