The Carolina parakeet, which was the only native neotropical parrot in the US, met the demise of its species because of human interference, researchers have found.

A group of scientists sequenced the parrot’s genome from a preserved specimen held in a private collection and cross-referenced it with the genome of its still-living relative, the South American sun parakeet.

They first looked for signs of inbreeding, which is an indicator of a species going through a slow decline.

Instead, researchers found the Carolina parakeet genome to be more genetically diverse in comparison to many bird species alive today.

Carles Lalueza-Fox, from the Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Pompeu Fabra University and co-author of the study, told National Geographic this indicates the birds experienced an “abrupt extinction process that left no marks in the parakeet genome”.

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Ms Lalueza-Fox also said the study ruled out disease as a main contributor to the bird’s demise as there was no evidence of it in the genetic analysis.

“Our results suggest [the Carolina parakeet’s] extinction was an abrupt process and thus likely solely attributable to human causes,” the study said.

The parrot’s genetic sequence indicated the population was doing well and could be found in New England in the east to Colorado in the west in “large and noisy flocks”.

When European settlers began expanding their territories and carrying out deforestation, hunting and trapping activites, the parrot population declined abruptly.

The study added: “The bird’s final extinction was likely accelerated by collectors and trappers when it became evident that it was extremely rare.”

The last captive parrot died in Cincinatti Zoo on 21 February 1918, in the same cage that the last passenger pigeon had died in in 1914.