It beats the hell out of me why some parrots carry so many different names and why people continue calling them inaccurately? It really frustrates me when someone is telling me about the type of parrot they have and then I go to look it up (in my parrot encyclopedia) and then can't find it because the name they gave is not the correct name. Then I have to search the internet for some source that uses both the correct and incorrect name to find the species or correct name to go back to look up. This makes it very difficult to keep on the same page.
The issue between Monk Parakeet vs. Quaker is just one of them. Now I know that both are one and the same bird but when I was newer to parrots, I thought it was two different kinds and I would get so confused. At one point I thought there were feral populations of Quakers and Monks at once. Most of these name differences I overcame by seeing similar pictures of differently called birds or through reading. But it still frustrates me to hear new bird types and then get confused like this.
It can be debated which is the "correct" name by all means, however, there is a scientifically accepted name which is used in all the literature and then there's the popular name. I understand that everyone would like the opportunity to name a species but this just creates so much confusion.
I am going to list some of the situations I know of where there are multiple names and I'd be curious to know the origins of the names and why there exist different names for them. I will list what I understand as the proper name on the left and the often used common name on the right:
Budgerigar - Parakeet (this one bugs me to no end because there are 90+ species considered parakeets and it makes no sense to call one type of parakeet just that)
Monk Parakeet - Quaker Parrot
Caique - Black Capped Parrot/White Bellied Parrot
Galah Cockatoo - Rose Breasted Cockatoo
Little Corella - Bare Eyed Cockatoo
Blue and Yellow Macaw - Blue and Gold Macaw
For instance I once heard mention of a blue and yellow macaw and I thought it must be different from blue and gold because I had also heard of blue throated. So it turned out that what I had been calling blue and gold all along really is blue and yellow. But these kinds of naming mishaps lead to so much confusion. Another one was when I heard American Parakeet. That one really threw me cause I'd never heard of a living native parakeet to the US and I was hearing stuff about American Parakeets. I really have no idea where that one came from!
Personally I do not care much for the debate about the names like which sounds nicer or which came first. I just prefer a commonly agreed on name be used so that I could understand what is being discussed and do further research.
I'll be the first to admit that I've used the wrong terminology out of not knowing any better and even still I sometimes say the wrong thing cause I learned the wrong one first and did not learn the scientifically accepted name until I started doing more reading/research about parrots. Here is one that I admit to making very recently: I have been talking about searching for a Cape parrot when really I am looking for an Uncape parrot. To make things more confusing there are two subspecies of Uncape parrot which are called the Brown Necked Parrot and the Grey Headed Parrot. It is not even clear if the Uncape is truly a different species than the Cape parrot. So this one is still up for debate. However, to the best of my knowledge all of the "Cape" parrots in captivity in the US are all actually from the Uncape subspecies groups.
At this moment I would just like to bring this forth for discussion and see if other people have been confused by name differences, if they are guilty of using the wrong name, what they consider to be the right/wrong name, what the naming standard should be, etc. If anyone knows about the history of the ways they were named, I'd be curious to know.









