Metro

Pink pigeon found in NYC park was ‘deliberately dyed’ for gender reveal or celebration: rescue group

This was bird-brained idea.

A pink-colored pigeon was rescued from a Manhattan park by a local bird lover and a wildlife group said the bird was “deliberately dyed” for a gender reveal or wedding.

The feathered victim had a bright pink hue and was suffering from malnutrition when found in Manhattan’s Madison Square Park on Monday, according to the Wild Bird Fund.

“Pigeons come in many different colors and plumages, but pink isn’t one of them,” the tweet said. “This is a domestic pigeon who was deliberately dyed this color and released.”

The Upper West Side nonprofit bird rehab group said that the pigeon might have been used for a gender reveal or other celebration and warned about the dangers of using live birds as party favors.

“Please never release domestic birds to the wild. Not for weddings, funerals, celebrations, art projects, anything. (We’d hope that “don’t dye them” goes without saying, but…) They will starve or be preyed on,” the group said on Twitter.

The painted pigeon showed “signs of long-term malnutrition” but was “now safely in care.”

“This poor bird has it bad enough as a domestic bird unable to find food in the wild, fly well or escape predators, but being a bright, unusual color makes him even more of a target. He’s also barely more than a fledgling but shows signs of longer malnutrition,” the group said.

Madison Square Garden pink pigeon.
A pink-colored pigeon was plucked from Madison Square Park this week. Wild Bird Fund

The Big Apple is “a major stopover” for more than 355 species of birds along the East Coast — many injured by flying into buildings or falling prey to cats, vehicles or “human interference” by New Yorkers.

The Madison Square Park pink pigeon may have been purchased at a poultry market, and it’s likely it had not flown before, ABC 7 reported Tuesday.

Madison Square Park in Midtown Manhattan.
The Wild Bird Fund says the bird was “deliberately dyed.” Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

The fowl idea was just the latest in a litany of misfortune and tragedy that has plagued gender reveal parties.

Last year, an ill-fated gender reveal scheme resulted in the deaths of two people on board a single-engine Cessna 206 after the plane plunged into the ocean near the shores of Cancun.

The parents-to-be along with friends and family had planned to announce their unborn baby’s sex in a banner overhead as they watched from the beach. But the aircraft took a nosedive into the Nichupte Lagoon while streaming the sign “It’s a girl!”

Another recent reveal in San Bernardino County, California prompted a forest fire that saw nearly 23,000 acres of wildlife around the El Dorado Ranch Park destroyed.

The botched celebrations even prompted the “inventor” of gender reveal parties, Jenna Karvunidis, to condemn such events going forward.