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CITES Appendix I · USA Bred

Captive-Bred African Grey Parrots: What It Means and Why It Matters

Every African Grey sold legally in the USA must be captive-bred with CITES documentation. Here's what that means, how to verify it, and why it makes a profound difference in the bird you bring home.

CITES Appendix I Documented USDA AWA Licensed Since 2014 USA Captive-Bred Only DNA Sexed Avian Vet Checked

What "Captive-Bred" Means for African Greys

A captive-bred African Grey was born from parents already living in legal captivity in the United States — in a licensed breeding facility under USDA Animal Welfare Act oversight. The bird has never been wild-caught, never been transported illegally, and carries a CITES Appendix I certificate that proves its legal status.

This distinction is not optional. African Greys (Psittacus erithacus) were uplisted to CITES Appendix I in 2016, and the Wild Bird Conservation Act of 1992 prohibited their commercial importation into the USA long before that. Every legally sold African Grey in the USA today traces its lineage entirely to birds already in captivity before those laws took effect.

The rule is simple: If a seller cannot produce a CITES certificate for the specific bird you are buying — not a generic letter, not a "breeder's statement" — walk away. Learn what CITES documentation looks like.


Captive-Bred vs. Wild-Caught: Why It Matters

This comparison isn't academic — it directly affects the bird you live with for the next 40–60 years.

Category Captive-Bred (Legal) Wild-Caught (Illegal in USA)
Legal status Fully legal with CITES docs Federal crime to import/sell
Temperament Socialized to humans from hatching Fearful, may never fully tame
Disease risk Vet-checked, low risk Can carry Psittacosis, Newcastle disease
Talking ability Develops naturally with socialization Often inhibited by trauma and fear
Lifespan in captivity 40–60 years with proper care Significantly reduced due to stress
Documentation CITES certificate + health guarantee Falsified documents or none

Why Captive-Bred Birds Bond Better

Hand-raised captive-bred African Greys are imprinted on humans during the critical socialization window — the first 12–16 weeks of life. During this window, the bird's brain is actively building the neural pathways that determine what it considers "safe" and "family." A bird raised entirely by humans during this period treats humans as its flock.

Wild-caught birds missed this window entirely. Their flock imprinting happened with other Greys in the forest canopy. No amount of patient taming can fully replicate what hand-raising achieves in weeks during that critical period.

This is also why taming a captive-bred hand-raised Grey takes weeks, not years.


How Our Birds Are Bred

Mark and Teri Benjamin have been captive-breeding African Grey parrots in Midland, Texas since 2014 under USDA Animal Welfare Act license. Our breeding pairs — both Congo and Timneh — were sourced from established USA captive bloodlines with full CITES traceability.

Every chick is pulled for hand-feeding at 2–3 weeks and handled daily by multiple family members through the full 12–16 week weaning period. Before placement, each bird receives:

  • CITES Appendix I documentation (specific to that individual bird)
  • DNA sex certificate from an accredited avian genetics laboratory
  • Avian veterinarian health certificate
  • Written health guarantee

Concerned about scams in the African Grey market? Read our guide on how to avoid African Grey parrot scams and verify any breeder before sending a deposit.

Captive-Bred FAQs

What does captive-bred mean for African Grey parrots?
Captive-bred means the bird was born from parents already in legal captivity in the USA — it has never been wild-caught or illegally imported. Every captive-bred African Grey sold in the USA must have CITES Appendix I documentation proving its legal captive-bred status. Wild-caught African Greys cannot be legally imported into the USA under the Wild Bird Conservation Act of 1992.
Are all African Grey parrots for sale in the USA captive-bred?
Legally, yes — but not every seller follows the law. Wild-caught African Greys are occasionally trafficked into the USA through falsified documents. Always demand CITES documentation and verify the breeder's USDA AWA license number before purchasing. If a seller cannot produce both, walk away.
Are captive-bred African Greys better pets than wild-caught?
Yes, significantly. Captive-bred hand-raised African Greys are socialized to humans from hatching, making them less fearful, more trainable, and more likely to develop talking ability. Wild-caught birds are traumatized by capture and transport, often never fully tame, and frequently carry diseases that can infect other birds in the household.

Browse Our Captive-Bred African Greys

Every bird we place carries CITES documentation, a DNA sex certificate, an avian vet health certificate, and a written health guarantee.

Reserve a Hand-Raised, CITES-Documented African Grey From C.A.Gs

Congo and Timneh African Greys, captive-bred in Midland, TX. Every Grey comes with CITES Appendix I paperwork, DNA sexing certificate, avian-vet health cert, and a written health guarantee.

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