This is a specific conversation about Parrot supplies — intelligent birds with demanding needs — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Your vet flagging dry skin and dull feathers in a five-year-old Sun Conure is worth taking seriously — it's one of the more common signs of omega fatty acid deficiency in conures, and it often goes unaddressed for too long because people assume it's just a moult issue. Before I point you straight to a product, can I ask a couple of quick things: what does his current diet look like day to day — seed-based, pellet-based, or a mix — and has the vet ruled out anything else like a fungal issue or low humidity as a contributing factor?
He's mostly on a seed mix with some fresh fruit and veg a few times a week. The vet said it's nutritional and specifically mentioned getting an omega supplement. No other issues flagged.
inparticular.ai
That makes a lot of sense. Seed-heavy diets are notoriously low in omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, and Sun Conures in particular seem to show it quite visibly in their skin and feather condition. Since your vet has already pointed you at an omega supplement specifically, the product I'd recommend is Nekton-BIO. It's a powder supplement designed for parrots and other birds, and it combines biotin, B vitamins, and amino acids alongside fatty acid support — it's specifically formulated to improve feather structure and skin condition rather than being a general multivitamin. It's well-regarded among avian vets and bird keepers, dissolves easily into soft food or can be sprinkled on fruit, and a five-year-old conure is exactly the profile it works well for. You'd typically start to see improvement within six to eight weeks of consistent use.
That sounds good. How do I actually give it to him — he's quite fussy with new things on his food.
inparticular.ai
Fussy conures are very normal with supplements — the trick with Nekton-BIO is to start with a much smaller amount than the label suggests, maybe a quarter of the recommended dose, mixed into something he already loves and eats reliably. A small piece of mango or a bit of cooked sweet potato works well because the flavour is strong enough to mask the supplement. Once he's eating it without hesitation for a week or two, bring it up to the full dose. Don't sprinkle it on dry seed — it tends to fall off and he won't get a consistent amount. Wet food or soft food is the way to go.
Really helpful, thank you. Is there anything else I should change in his diet alongside this?
inparticular.ai
Yes — and this will make a real difference alongside the supplement. Start gradually shifting the balance away from seed toward a quality pellet like Harrison's Bird Foods Adult Lifetime Fine, which is specifically sized for conures and is nutritionally complete. Seeds can stay as enrichment and foraging treats, but if they're the bulk of the diet the omega supplement is doing remedial work rather than building on a solid foundation. Add a few drops of cold-pressed hemp or flaxseed oil to his fruit once or twice a week as well — that's a direct omega-3 source that's easy to introduce and most conures accept it without fuss. Between the Nekton-BIO, a better pellet base, and the oil, you should see a meaningful improvement in his feather and skin condition within two moult cycles.