Blue-And-Yellow Macaw
Ara ararauna
The blue-and-yellow macaw (Ara ararauna), also called the blue-and-gold macaw, is a large South American parrot of riverine forest, palm swamps, gallery woodland, and savanna edges. Its turquoise-blue back, golden underparts, greenish forehead, long tail, and bare facial skin with fine feather lines make it one of the most recognizable macaws. In the wild it travels in pairs or small groups, feeding on palm fruits, seeds, nuts, and other plant foods, and nesting in large tree cavities.
As a companion bird, this macaw is a decades-long commitment requiring space, noise tolerance, social time, and serious enrichment. A suitable home or aviary provides flight or climbing room, chewable materials, bathing, varied produce, formulated diet, and safe nuts or seeds in measured amounts. Hand-reared birds still need boundaries and species-appropriate behavior, not constant handling as a substitute for training. Buyers should look for legal captive-bred birds with clear paperwork, because wild trapping has affected many parrot populations.