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  1. Apr 5, 2024 · cuckoo, any of numerous birds of the family Cuculidae (order Cuculiformes). The name usually designates some 60 arboreal members of the subfamilies Cuculinae and Phaenicophaeinae. In western Europe “cuckoo,” without modifiers, refers to the most common local form, elsewhere called the common, or European, cuckoo ( Cuculus canorus ).

  2. It is well known as a brood parasite: females lay their eggs in the nests of smaller birds, and their hapless 'hosts' raise only young cuckoos. A common migratory bird across most of Europe and Asia, it regularly strays to the western Alaskan islands in late spring and early summer.

  3. Yellow-billed Cuckoos are slender, long-tailed birds that manage to stay well hidden in deciduous woodlands. They usually sit stock still, even hunching their shoulders to conceal their crisp white underparts, as they hunt for large caterpillars. Bold white spots on the tail’s underside are often the most visible feature on a shaded perch ...

  4. Yellow-billed Cuckoos are slender, long-tailed birds that manage to stay well hidden in deciduous woodlands. They usually sit stock still, even hunching their shoulders to conceal their crisp white underparts, as they hunt for large caterpillars. Bold white spots on the tail’s underside are often the most visible feature on a shaded perch.

  5. Cuculus. SPECIES. Cuculus canorus. Population size. 40-74.9 Mlnlnn. Life Span. 4-10 years. Weight. 111. g oz. Length. 32-34. cm inch. Wingspan. 55-60. cm inch. The Common cuckoo ( Cuculus canorus) is a member of the cuckoo order of birds, Cuculiformes, which includes the roadrunners, the anis, and the coucals.

  6. Macaulay Library. eBird. Explore Common Cuckoo. Found in woodland, heathland, farmland with hedges, marshes with scattered bushes.

  7. VDOM DHTML tml>. Cuckoo guide: why they call ‘cuckoo’, how they trick other birds, and where they go in winter - Discover Wildlife.

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