Nonparasitic cuckoos
- Related Topics:
- cuckoo
- hoatzin
- turaco
- coucal
- ground cuckoo
Most of the nonparasitic cuckoos form stable pair bonds and defend territories, within which they build their nests and rear their own young. The guira and the anis are exceptional in that they live in flocks of five to 20 individuals, each flock defending a territory within which its members feed and nest. Several birds of the flock may cooperate in building a nest, in which two or more females may lay eggs and share incubation. Many members of the flock participate in feeding the young.
The nests of nonparasitic cuckoos are loose platforms of twigs placed in low vegetation or, rarely, on the ground. The coucals are unusual in that they build sizable domed nests of grass and twigs, on or near the ground, with side entrances.
Migration
Like most insectivorous birds in temperate climates, temperate-zone cuckoos migrate toward or across the Equator for the winter. The migrations of some species are remarkable in that the young of the year travel completely independently of their parents and may cross up to 3,200 km (about 2,000 miles) of open ocean unguided. Adults and young of some of the small Australasian glossy cuckoos separately migrate long distances to relatively small oceanic islands. It is obvious that the means of orientation and navigation must be unusually precise, but what they are remains as yet unknown.
Form and function
In general body plan, most cuckoos resemble the “perching birds” (order Passeriformes). They are slender-bodied, with medium to long wings and medium to extremely long tails, the latter sometimes constituting more than half the total length of the bird. The tail is usually graduated (the outer feathers shorter), and the individual feathers often are white-tipped.
The foot structure of cuckoos is distinctive and at close range distinguishes these birds from any with which they might be confused. The foot of cuckoos is zygodactylous, or yoke-toed (that is, the outer toe is directed backward).
The cuckoo bill, although usually slender, is occasionally quite stout, as in the ground cuckoos and coucals, in which it makes a formidable weapon for subduing prey. In the anis the bill is heavy, with a strong ridge along the culmen (top), and in the channel-billed cuckoo (Scythrops novaehollandiae) of Australasia it is extremely large, almost like that of toucans. In addition, a number of cuckoos are usually brightly coloured around the eye or between the eye and the bill. Prominent crests, a feature rare in cuckoos, are well developed only in the genus Clamator.
Evolution and paleontology
The order Cuculiformes is not well represented in the fossil record, but cuckoos apparently existed by the early Paleogene Period, some 60 million years ago. The dearth of fossil evidence is not surprising in view of the group’s preference for forest habitats; woodland animals, particularly small ones and particularly birds, are less frequently fossilized than those in open areas or aquatic habitats.
Although not a large group, the modern species of cuckoos have highly diverse and specialized breeding behaviours. These behaviours range from extremes of social cooperation among pairs, such as the combination of eggs into a single nest in which incubation is shared, to the obligate brood parasitism of other species. The behaviour of brood parasitism has evolved multiple times in family Cuculidae. Some species—such as roadrunners, ground cuckoos and couas—are highly terrestrial.
Classification
- Order Cuculiformes
- Family Opisthocomidae (hoatzin)
- Long neck and small head, with prominent crest of long feathers; beak short, stout, laterally flattened. Wings large and rounded; tail long and broad. Brown above, marked with white and russet; buff below. Nestling with 2 free, clawed digits on each wing. Adult size large, length about 61 cm (24 inches). 1 extant genus with 1 species; river systems of northern South America.
Critical appraisal
Formerly, the turacos were a family (Musophagidae) within order Cuculiformes; however, most ornithologists treat them as a separate order (Musophagiformes) at present. The parrots (Psittaciformes) are often considered on osteological and myological evidence to be the closest relatives of the cuculiforms, but even this relationship, if it exists at all, is not a close one. DNA studies have defined six distinct groups: the Old World parasitic cuckoos, the malkohas and couas, the coucals, the American cuckoos, the anis, and the New World ground cuckoos. Some authorities recognize these groups, especially the coucals of the Old World tropics, as separate families.
Herbert Friedmann