by Pajarita » Tue Jul 28, 2015 9:52 am
What I am going to say will sound harsh to you but, unfortunately, it's the truth: it was something you did or did not do. Now, I don't know what that 'something' was because I don't know what you did or did not do but these things only happen when the male bird is so stressed out that he feels that the babies will be better dead because the number one prime directive for any species on earth is to procreate and a parent would never kill its offspring unless something was really, really, really wrong.
Now, I don't breed parrots but I've bred canaries for 25 years and can assure you that, when it comes to breeding in captivity, both the success and the failure of it is all up to us. I'll give you an example: male cockatoos were famous for hurting and even killing the females during breeding season to the point that, in order for them to breed successfully, breeders would routinely break their jaw bone in half so the split beak (which never healed, of course) would not allow them to apply the pressure necessary for the bite to be fatal. This was accepted for many years as something that just happened but people starting learning more about birds and started going to nature to observe the behaviors of the wild birds so as to compare - and you know what they found out? That the reason this was happening was because the cockatoo hens 'finish' their breeding conditioning by watching the male build the nest and as in captivity breeding pairs were given metal nests (the wood ones got demolished), a huge number of them never quite got to the high conditioning required so they were not allowing the males to cover them and the males, getting extremely frustrated with the females because they were overly-hormonal, would attack them. See what I mean? It wasn't the birds' fault, it was the humans doing something wrong. And, every single time something goes wrong with breeding (and I am talking chronic layers, eggbinding, sickly babies, high mortality, low fertility, DIS, etc) is ALWAYS something we do or don't do.
So, re-evaluate your husbandry completely and be super objective about it and I am sure you will figure out what it was that failed and made the bird think that his babies were better off dead.