Long-tailed Koel (Eudynamys taitensis) - Wiki Long-tailed Cuckoo
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Order: Cuculiformes
Family: Cuculidae
[Photo] Long-tailed Koel (Eudynamys taitensis); Shows two long-tailed cuckoos Eudynamys taitensis, the adult on a branch to the left, the chick on the ground receiving a worm from a grey warbler Gerygone igata perched on a branch above it. Source: Alexander Turnbull Library (http://digital.natlib.govt.nz/get/20835?profile=access). Date: 1888, From Buller, Walter Lawry. "A history of the birds of New Zealand.", 2d. ed. Volume I. London, 1888. Plate 14, opp. p. 126. Author: J. G. Keulemans delt. & lith. [Plate XIV, 1888].
The Long-tailed Cuckoo (Eudynamys taitensis), also known as the Long-tailed Koel or the Koekoea in M??ori, is a species of cuckoo in the Cuculidae family. The species breeds in New Zealand, and migrates to the islands of the western Pacific in the winter.
The Long-tailed Cuckoo is a brood parasite, laying its eggs in the nests of Yellowheads, Whiteheads and Brown Creepers. The eggs hatch before those of the host do so and the young chicks eject the eggs of the host. Long-tail Cuckoo chicks are able to mimic the calls of their host's chicks.
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