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Hormone control, and dealing with unwanted/unexpected egg laying

34K views 1 reply 1 participant last post by  tielfan 
#1 · (Edited by Moderator)
Cockatiels are opportunistic breeders, and the level of breeding hormones will rise and fall for both males and females according to whether current conditions seem favorable or unfavorable for breeding. This will happen even if the bird doesn’t have a mate. But we have a lot of control over our birds’ environment, and can manipulate the situation to help control their hormone levels. These techniques work on most cockatiels. This article deals with hormone reduction to reduce or eliminate unwanted breeding behavior, but people who want their birds to breed can stimulate breeding behavior by doing the opposite of what it says here.

Why control hormone levels?

A female with a high level of breeding hormones may start laying eggs. If she has been mating with a male it’s likely that the eggs will be fertile, which can be a big problem for owners who don’t want to take on the heavy responsibility of breeding. If she hasn’t been mating with a male the eggs will definitely be infertile, and egg production will place an unnecessary burden on her physical resources. An egg contains all the materials needed to build an eggshell and a complete baby bird, and every molecule of this comes from the hen’s body. This nutrient drain occurs on a very fast schedule, too. Unlike a human mother who has 9 months to take in all the materials needed to make her baby, the average cockatiel hen will lay an egg every other day until she has a clutch of 4 to 6 eggs. It’s obviously undesirable to put a hen through all this strain unless she has a sexually competent mate and you have an active desire to breed your birds. If the hen isn’t healthy and well-nourished enough to lay normal eggs, she is at risk of dying from egg binding, egg yolk peritonitis, and other problems related to the egg-laying process.

Males obviously don’t have to face the risks of egg laying. But high hormone levels can cause behavior problems, and your male will have a sweeter temperament and be easier to live with if his hormones aren’t raging.

The time to start applying hormone reduction techniques is when you notice that your bird is getting hormonal.

What are the signs of hormonal behavior?

Aggression and territoriality, especially from males (usually related to the cage and/or an object that the bird perceives as a mate). Seeking out a location for a nest – semi-dark partly-enclosed areas are preferred since wild cockatiels nest in tree holes, but a corner in the bottom of the cage is also a popular location. Shredding paper or wood is nesting behavior, similar to a wild bird chewing up the interior and entryway of its nest hole to improve the site. Many males will sing and dance throughout the year and this is normal, but a big increase in this courtship behavior is a sign of rising hormones. Females may solicit sex by leaning forward to flatten out their back and vocalizing. Both sexes may engage in masturbation (if single) or copulation (if mated).

If you have a mated pair or a single female, it’s best to take control of the situation promptly when you see signs that the hormone levels are rising. It takes time for the hormone levels to rise high enough for egg laying to begin, and there is still time to intervene even if you’ve seen sexual activity once or twice. But if you delay too long, the hormone level might rise to the “point of no return” where it will be impossible to prevent egg laying.

How to reduce hormone levels

We reduce hormone levels by knowing the conditions that make hormone levels rise and doing the opposite. Some birds will respond to just one technique, others respond to a combination of techniques, and a few won’t respond at all.

1. Manipulating the photoperiod, aka the long nights treatment. This is by far the most effective technique, and in many cases will be the only one that’s needed. The longer days of spring and summer are a major breeding trigger, since they provide favorable conditions for food plants to grow and extra daylight hours for the parent birds to collect food for the babies. It can seem like spring all the time in our homes, since we have electric “sunlight” when it’s dark outside and pleasant indoor temperatures all year long. But we have the power to make it seem like night when it’s actually light outside, and trick our birds’ bodies into thinking that it’s winter and therefore not a good time to breed.

To do this, we make sure that our birds get 12 to 14 hours of uninterrupted darkness every night for at least a week. It doesn’t have to be pitch black but it does have to be quiet enough and dark enough to seem like night. Any light in the sleeping area shouldn’t be brighter than the light of a full moon; it’s OK to have a small night light. If you have a quiet, windowless room where the bird can sleep, that’s perfect; or you can put a heavy cover on the cage to make it dark inside. You can test the light-resistance of the cover by draping it over your own head. It won’t do any good to throw a light cover over the birdcage in a room where there’s human activity going on; this might actually make things worse, since the noise and shadowy light coming through the cover will simulate conditions inside a nest box rather than the night-time conditions that you want.

Once you’ve found a suitable location and/or cover, you are now in control of when “sunset” and “sunrise” occur. Follow a fairly regular schedule of 10-12 hours of light followed by 12-14 hours of darkness. In the beginning it will seem like it isn’t working because the hormonal behavior isn’t changing, but after about a week there will be a sudden dramatic reduction in breeding behavior. Once the change has kicked in you can discontinue the long nights if you want to, but be aware that hormone levels might start rising again if you allow longer days.

There are some cases where a bird doesn’t respond to the long nights treatment but will respond to 24 hours a day of nonstop bright light, or to reversing day and night by having bright lights when it’s dark outside and darkness when it’s light outside. I don’t know the biological reason for this result, but I would guess that the bird’s body is so confused that making babies doesn’t seem like a good idea.

2. Manipulating the environment. Birds want to raise their babies in a safe and secure environment, and to discourage them we need to make the environment seem less safe and secure without actually scaring the birds. We do this by rearranging things so the house doesn’t seem as comfortable and familiar as it did before. Some of the options are to rearrange the interior of the cage (perches, bowls, toys, etc.); change the location of the cage; put the bird in a different, unfamiliar cage; put the bird in a different room; bring a large, unfamiliar object into the room and keep it there; and/or rearrange the furniture in the room.

3. Manipulating the food supply. It’s a good time to breed when food is plentiful, so we have to make the food supply seem a little less abundant. Make sure that your birds have balanced nutrition and enough food to get through the day, but don’t provide so much that it seems like there’s enough available to feed babies too. Parent birds prefer soft foods for their babies so emphasize harder foods and minimize the amount of softer foods.

4. Eliminate nesting sites – this means NO happy huts! Don’t let your bird have regular access to anything that resembles a suitable nesting place; this applies to both males and females. There are some parrot species that sleep in a nest hole all year long, but cockatiels are not one of these species. The ONLY thing they use a nest for is making babies, and if they have a nice nesting area they will start wanting to use it. Do NOT give them a real nest box or a happy hut (bird tent). Don’t let them have regular access to dark and/or semi-enclosed spaces like cabinets, drawers, bookshelves, cardboard boxes, baskets, or underneath a bed or couch.

It’s desirable to have a cage with a grate in the bottom that prevents access to the cage paper, but if your cage allows access and your bird starts doing a lot of shredding, one option is to remove the paper and wash the poop out of the empty tray when it’s time to clean the cage. This may be a nuisance, but it’s better than unwanted egg-laying and crazy hormonal-male behavior. If your cockatiel has a preferred nest corner in the cage or elsewhere, you can put an object in that location (like a toy or food bowl) to block it off.

5. Eliminate or reduce access to real or imaginary mates. In the case of a mated pair, you can keep them in separate, side by side cages if they are content this way, with supervised out of cage time together. Don’t try to separate them completely, it will make them unhappy and they will do a lot of screaming back and forth at each other. In the case of a single bird that masturbates with an inanimate object, take the object away or cover it up so the bird can’t “play” with it any more.

Be careful about how you touch the bird. Head scritches are usually OK, but do NOT pet a hen on the back because this is sexually stimulating – it feels vaguely like a male standing on her back for copulation. There are some sources that recommend not touching males on the back as well, but it isn’t as directly sexual for males so you can get away with more of it with them. The male and female rub their vents together during copulation so you shouldn’t touch either sex in this area – not that most people would want to!
 
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#2 · (Edited by Moderator)
Unwanted eggs are being laid. Now what?

As a general rule you should not remove the eggs unless the egg is broken or leaking (you should remove it in that case because it’s a bacteria hazard). The hen’s natural instinct is to keep laying eggs until she has a full clutch, and if you remove the eggs she will lay extra eggs to replace them. If she has laid an egg in an inappropriate place, you can put it in a suitable location in the cage.

Make sure that the hen has an ample intake of calcium and vitamin D3, and try to boost the quality of her nutrition in general. This will reduce the likelihood of egg binding, soft-shelled eggs and related problems – see Lack of calcium (Importance of Calcium) and Lighting, Diet, and Vitamin D3 If your hen has symptoms of egg binding it’s a medical emergency and you need to contact a vet ASAP. If she lays a soft-shelled or no-shell egg, her calcium levels are very low and she’s at high risk for medical complications and serious problems when the next egg is laid. Quick action is needed to improve her calcium levels, and it’s best to see a vet for the fastest treatment options (calcium shots), although you might be able to solve the deficiency problem with a liquid calcium supplement made for birds. There are several different brands but they all seem to use the same formula, and contain calcium, magnesium, and vitamin D3 (the last two ingredients are necessary for calcium absorption). Some pet stores stock these supplements and some don’t, so call around until you find a pet store that has it. Follow the directions carefully since an overdose is as bad as a deficiency.

If it's possible that the eggs are fertile, you have a decision to make. If you decide to let the pair go ahead with the breeding process, you need to provide them with a suitable nestbox (see Nestboxes and nestbox litter ) and start learning all you can about cockatiel breeding ASAP. If you decide that you do NOT want the eggs to hatch, you can boil or freeze the eggs to kill the embryo and return the eggs to the parents after the eggs are back at room temperature, or replace the real eggs with fake eggs ( DummyEggs.com, Dummy Eggs Help Stop Egg Laying in Pet Birds! Fake Eggs, Solid Plastic Eggs in all sizes. is a good source). Then follow the recommendations for infertile eggs, substituting the word “pair” for “hen” in the following paragraphs.

If there is no chance that the eggs are fertile, you want to put a stop to the breeding process as fast as possible. Immediately start applying as many of the hormone reduction techniques as you can, but keep in mind that they might not be very effective because the hen’s hormone levels are already very high. Do NOT give her a real nestbox or any kind of enclosed box, since that will help keep her hormone levels high. But do provide an open box or basket that will keep the eggs together in a reasonably safe manner, without seeming as safe and secure as an enclosed box. Let her keep the eggs for at least a week. Many birds don’t start incubating until several eggs have been laid, so she might ignore the eggs at first and start sitting on them later. If she hasn’t started incubating after a full week, you can be pretty confident that she isn’t interested and remove the eggs. If she does start incubating, let her keep the eggs until she loses interest in them, which usually takes about three weeks or so. Hope that the hormone reduction techniques will have an effect before the eggs reach their theoretical hatch date, because if you can’t reduce her hormone levels she might lay a new clutch to replace the one that didn’t hatch out.

Sometimes it is effective to remove the eggs as soon as they are laid and apply the hormone reduction techniques in drastic fashion. If you have a hen that has just had a major change in her life (losing her mate or going to a new home for example) this is likely to work, although she might lay another egg or two before she stops. But in general you’re taking a risk if you take the eggs away, and your hen could end up laying many more eggs than she would have laid otherwise.

Stopping a breeding pair from starting another clutch. Many breeding pairs will want to start working on a new clutch when their current babies are one or two weeks away from fledging. It’s almost impossible to prevent them from starting a second clutch, and if you are letting them raise the babies to weaning you don’t want to interfere with their hormone levels too much because of the risk that they might abandon the babies. But it’s fairly easy to stop them from starting a third clutch; a light application of the hormone-reduction techniques and removing the nest as soon as the last baby fledges will usually do the trick.

Chronic egg laying is when a hen lays an excessive number of eggs and is pretty much unstoppable. This will eventually put her life at risk, but there are medical interventions that can help. Your vet can give her Lupron shots to reduce her hormone levels, and this is safe and effective in most cases. In extreme cases, a hysterectomy will put a final stop to the egg laying. But this is a high-risk operation in birds, so it is only done as a last resort to save the hen’s life.

There have been cases where chronic egg laying stopped after the hen was allowed to hatch out and raise one or more babies (from her own eggs or “borrowed” eggs). But don’t count on this to work in all or even most cases.
 
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