Why Does My Bird Bite? Understanding and Solving Biting
Biting is a Message
When a bird bites, they are communicating something. Understanding the reason behind the bite is the key to resolving it.
Fear Biting
The most common reason. The bird feels threatened and bites in self-defense. Solutions: move slowly, respect their space, and build trust gradually. Never punish a fear bite.
Hormonal Biting
During breeding season, birds may become territorial and nippy. Reduce daylight hours to 12 hours, avoid petting below the neck, and remove nesting materials.
Territorial Biting
Some birds become cage-aggressive. They bite when you reach into their cage. Solution: train a step-up command so the bird comes to you willingly rather than being reached for.
Excitement Biting
Some birds bite when overstimulated or excited. Watch for body language cues (eye pinning, rapid movement) and redirect with a toy before the bite happens.
Beaking vs. Biting
Young birds explore the world with their beaks. Light beak pressure is not a bite — it is like a baby mouthing objects. Do not overreact to beaking or you may teach the bird that beaking gets a reaction.
What NOT to Do
Never flick, blow on, shake, or yell at a biting bird. These punishments increase fear and aggression. Instead, calmly set the bird down and walk away. Return attention only when the bird is calm.
Consistency
Everyone in the household must respond to biting the same way. Inconsistent responses confuse the bird and prolong the problem.
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