Updated

Bird guides

Can Birds Eat Plum Pits?

Toxic or urgent

Do not feed plum pits. If it was eaten, remove access and contact an avian veterinarian or animal poison hotline.

Bird emergency prep setup with hard-sided carrier, towel liner, gram scale, care notebook, water cup, food sample, and flashlight.
SafetyToxic or urgent
Next stepRemove plum pits and anything mixed with it.

Call before watching

If plum pits was eaten, keep the bird calm and contained, and call an avian veterinarian or animal poison hotline with the amount, time, species, weight, and symptoms.

Professional advice first

For toxic foods, professional guidance comes before a wait-and-see approach.

Write facts down

Species, weight, amount, time, symptoms, and packaging help the veterinarian triage faster.

Reset the bowl

Clean the dish, remove mixed food, and return to the normal diet only after you have professional guidance.

Where it fits

Plum Pits has no place in a pet bird's food bowl. Treat access as an urgent food exposure, not a portion question.

Match the species

Budgies, cockatiels, parrots, finches, canaries, doves, and specialist birds do not all use one diet template.

Keep the baseline stable

New foods are easier to judge when water, staple diet, sleep, and cleaning stay consistent.

Use the checker as a start

The decision for plum pits should still be adjusted for species, age, weight, egg laying, illness, and your avian veterinarian's diet plan.

How to handle it

  • Remove plum pits and anything mixed with it.
  • Keep the bird calm and contained away from the hazard while you call an avian veterinarian or animal poison hotline.
  • Call an avian veterinarian or animal poison hotline with the amount, time, species, weight, and any packaging.

Avoid

  • Waiting to see if symptoms appear.
  • Forcing water, oil, vomiting, home remedies, or medication unless a veterinarian instructs it.

Watch

  • Call an avian veterinarian now for breathing change, weakness, seizures, vomiting or regurgitation, balance trouble, bleeding, collapse, fluffed posture, or not eating.

Portion

No safe portion. Treat access as urgent and ask for professional guidance.

References