Common Cuckoo: Large cuckoo with gray upperparts and paler underparts with dark bars on belly. Wings are dark gray; tail is dark gray with faint spotting on outer edges near base. Female is similar but with buff breast or may be red-brown with dark bars overall. Juvenile is dark gray washed with brown.
Common Cuckoo: Native of Eurasia; casual visitor to the Pribilofs and Aleutians; accidental in Massachusetts.
"coo-koo", "klu-klu-klu"
The Cuckoo lays its eggs in other bird's nests and so is sometimes regarded as evil. It's a symbol of unfaithfulness, in Japan a symbol of unrequited love.
There are positive associations as well, linking the Cockoo to fertility and rain.
In some areas it is considered like the groundhog, and hearing it's song signifies the start of Spring. However if it sings too early it forewarns of frost and poor harvests.
A group of cuckoos are collectively known as a "cooch" and an "asylum" of cuckoos.
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Family
Roadrunners and Cuckoos (Cuculidae)
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Species
Cuculus canorus
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Length12.5 - 14.5
Inches
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Wingspan29
Inches
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Common Cuckoo: Large cuckoo, gray upperparts, paler underparts with dark bars on belly. Dark gray wings; tail is dark gray with spotting on outer edges near base. Feeds on caterpillars, insects and larvae. Wings are held low in flight, depressed far below body at bottom of downstroke.
● Song: "coo-koo", "klu-klu-klu"
● Foraging & Feeding: Common Cuckoo: Eats hairy caterpillars and other insects; forages in open trees and shrubs.
● Breeding & nesting: Common Cuckoo: Nest parasite: eight to twenty-five eggs are laid each season in nests of other species. Incubation ranges from 11 to 13 days and is carried out by host species. Eggs are white or match the color of the host species.
● Similar species: Common Cuckoo: Oriental Cuckoo has darker upperparts, paler underparts, and buff undertail coverts.
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BreedingPromiscuous
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PopulationAccidental to casual
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MigrationMigratory
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Weight4
Ounces
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