The lorikeet aviary where you can feed lorikeets.
All members of the genus have exceptional bright plumage, particularly the unusual all over blues of the blue lorikeet and the ultramarine lorikeet.
It is sometimes considered a subspecies of the rainbow lorikeet, but today most major authorities consider them as separate species.
No other member of the rainbow lorikeet group has an orange-red collar over the nape.
The analysis of all observations suggested that the blue-fronted lorikeet preferably inhabits forests at the altitude of several hundred meters.
The iris lorikeet is usually found in small flocks.
Its relative, the red-throated lorikeet, feared extinct since the beginning of the 20th century, apparently survived in considerable numbers to the 1970s.
It has often been considered a subspecies of the rainbow lorikeet, but following a review in 1997, it is increasingly treated as a separate species.