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Can Parrots Eat Blackberries? What You Need to Know (Vet-Verified Info)

PetKeen_Can Parrots Eat_blackberries

Yes, blackberries can be great treats for your parrot. They have plenty of essential vitamins and nutrients that aren’t found in many traditional parrot foods, such as nuts and seeds.

However, blackberries shouldn’t make up a considerable portion of your parrot’s diet. They don’t provide everything that your parrot needs to thrive. They make a good supplement, but your bird should get most of their calories from pellets or similarly balanced foods. Also, while many parrots like blackberries, some don’t, no matter how they are presented.

Feeding blackberries to a parrot isn’t always straightforward. You don’t want your parrot to eat too many because this may cause nutritional problems. However, you don’t want to avoid feeding fruit to your parrot altogether.

We help you understand this balancing act in this article.

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Parrot Nutrition and Diet

To understand where blackberries fit into your bird’s diet, you need to understand precisely what your parrot should be eating. Sadly, we don’t know as much about bird nutrition as we do other animals. Many people assume that all birds have the same nutritional needs, but this isn’t always true.

Many pet parrots are fed incorrectly. An improper diet has a significant impact on their health and lifespan. There is a reason that many parrots don’t live their entire lifespan when kept as pets.

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Seeds vs. Pellets

Many commercial parrot foods are seed mixes. However, these diets are often not ideal for your parrot. They are often too low in specific vitamins, like vitamin A. At the same time, most are far too high in fat. Pet parrots typically need a diet consisting primarily of carbohydrates, not fat.

Seed diets also enable the bird to eat selectively. They may pick out the seeds they want and leave the ones that they don’t. This behavior can lead to an even less nutritionally complete diet because they will only be eating a selective group of foods.

Pellets are often better for most parrots. Seeds should be offered sparingly for most pet parrots. Pellets are made out of many different ingredients, including grains, fruits, and veggies. They are specifically formulated for birds. Therefore, they tend to be more nutritionally complete. They contain all the vitamins and nutrients that your pet needs to thrive. Pellets also prevent selective feeding because the bird can’t pick out the individual ingredients.

Overall, pellets should be the primary source of nutrition for your parrot. Even fresh foods like blackberries and other veggies shouldn’t make up the majority of your bird’s diet. They aren’t nutritionally complete, while pellets are carefully formulated. We recommend that pellets make up at least 50% of your bird’s diet, though 75% is a better percentage.

What About Fruits?

Fruits are essential in your pet’s diet. They provide vitamins and minerals that your parrot may be lacking, and they provide variety to your bird’s pellet diet.

You should offer your bird different fruits, including blackberries. That said, even if your parrot loves blackberries, you should avoid offering only their favorites. Birds are notorious for becoming picky eaters. If you only provide them with the fruit that they like the best, they’ll become even pickier.

We recommend offering blackberries to your bird alongside other fruits or veggies. Don’t provide just one option at a time. Your goal is to aim for variety. Your parrot needs to eat a wide array of different fruits and veggies, not just blackberries.

Parrot eating watermelon
Image By: Valdas Vrubliauskas, Shutterstock

Do Parrots Like Blackberries?

Parrots are all individuals. Some of them like blackberries, and others do not. It depends mainly on what they’re offered when they are younger and less set in their ways. As parrots get older, convincing them to try new things becomes more challenging.

Even if your parrot doesn’t like blackberries the first time they try them, you shouldn’t give up. Most parrots require multiple introductions to a food before they will eat it. They’re a bit like toddlers in this way. Expect to offer food 10 times before your parrot eats it and then even more before they readily accept it.

We recommend offering multiple foods at one time, including one that you know your bird will like. If you put out a new food, your parrot may ignore it and retreat to the other side of the cage. If you pair it with a healthy food that they love, though, they’ll interact with the food more and therefore, are more likely to try it.

Blackberries and Pesticides

Blackberries are often sprayed with pesticides, just like other fruits and veggies. However, you can’t peel a blackberry like a banana or some other fruits. Therefore, you are much more likely to consume higher levels of pesticides if you don’t wash blackberries before consuming them.

It isn’t easy to clean blackberries thoroughly, though. Their skin is soft, so you can’t scrub them like other fruits. All the nooks and crannies also make it challenging to remove the pesticides altogether.

For this reason, we recommend purchasing organic blackberries for your bird when possible. Organic berries are typically not sprayed with chemical pesticides. However, what exactly counts as “organic” differs from area to area. Different permitting agencies have different regulations. Do your research on these policies before choosing which blackberries to purchase. A few pesticides won’t hurt us. But birds are much smaller. It doesn’t take nearly as much to offset their health and cause side effects.

Also, parrots tend to be more sensitive to certain chemicals than you might expect. There are few studies on parrots and pesticides, though, so we don’t know precisely which ones to avoid. For this reason, it is often best to avoid all of them.

blackberries-pixabay
Image Credit: Svetlbel, Pixabay

Can Parrots Have Blackberry Juice?

Blackberry juice may be a suitable option for parrots occasionally. However, blackberry juice has had some nutrients removed because the juice is free of the skin and seeds. Juice doesn’t have the fiber that whole berries do, for instance.

Many juices are also full of added sugar. This sugar is not necessary for your bird. If you do decide to purchase blackberry juice, be sure to check the labels, and only choose options without any added sugar.

Portioning juice is often tricky. Juice is much more concentrated in sugar than the berries themselves. Therefore, your bird should only be given a tiny bit. Otherwise, they may consume too much sugar.

Blackberry juice also doesn’t taste the same as blackberries. Therefore, it will often take time for the bird to become used to the taste. Even if your bird currently likes blackberries, they probably won’t like blackberry juice the first time or two. Plan on offering the juice a few times before your bird decides that they do or don’t like it.

Can Parrots Have Dried Blackberries?

Parrots can have dried blackberries. However, remember that these fruits are concentrated and therefore, higher in sugar. Dried blackberries should be considered snacks and not necessarily great additions to your parrot’s diet. Whole blackberries are preferred, though dried blackberries do contain about the same amount of nutrients!

Parrots will eat more dried blackberries before they feel full, potentially increasing the amount of sugar they take in. For this reason, we typically don’t recommend feeding them as many ounces of dried blackberries as you would whole blackberries. The serving size needs to be far less.

Parrots Eat Blackberries
Image Credit: Nico99, Shutterstock

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Conclusion

Blackberries are great supplements to a parrot’s diet. They provide plenty of vitamins and minerals, making them among the better options out there. However, they should only make up a small portion of your parrot’s diet. They are nutrient-dense but still don’t contain all the nutrients your parrot needs.

Your parrot should live primarily off of pellets, which are particularly formulated to meet their nutritional needs. For their supplemental fruits and veggies intake, though, blackberries make a solid choice.

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Featured Image Credit: Ajale, Pixabay

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