When Macquarie Island was discovered in 1810 the parrots were widespread in tussock
grassland and abundant on the shoreline, feeding on
invertebrates in beach-washed
seaweed. Despite the introduction of
dogs and
cats to the island by 1820, as well as being hunted for food by
sealers, the parrots remained common there until about 1880. The transition from abundance to extinction took little more than a decade. The critical events leading to the extinction of the parrot were the introductions of both
wekas and
European rabbits to the island in the 1870s and their subsequent spread during the 1880s. Until then winter, with the seasonal absence of
burrow-
nesting
petrels and breeding
penguins, was a period of food scarcity for
terrestrial predators, which served to keep their numbers low. The presence of rabbits provided a year-round food supply for cats and wekas and allowed their numbers to expand, leading to increased predation on the parrot, the last sighting of which was in 1891. ==References==