The black-billed cuckoo is a slender bird, 11.0-12.2 inches (28-31 cm) in length, with a wingspan of 13.4-15.8 inches (34-40 cm).
It has a long white-tipped tail with gray undersides. It has a down-curved black bill and a ring of red skin around its eyes.
It is a soft brown on its head, back, and wings. It has a light, sandy-brown throat and a white breast and belly. Males and females look alike.
The black-billed cuckoo is found in thickets, orchards, groves of trees, marshes, and forest edges.
Caterpillars make up a large part of the black-billed cuckoo’s diet. It also eats other large insects, bird eggs, berries, fruits, and seeds.
The black-billed female lays 2-4 eggs in a messily arranged cup of twigs and grasses that is placed low in a tree or bush.
Both parents incubate the eggs for 10 to 13 days. The chicks fledge when they are 7 to 9 days old.
The black-billed cuckoo is often heard but not seen. It stays hidden in dense vegetation.
Its call is a “coo-coo-coo-coo” sound, usually repeated a few times.
Support for NatureWorks Redesign is provided by:
The black-billed cuckoo breeds across New Hampshire.
The black-billed cuckoo breeds from Alberta, Canada, east to Nova Scotia, Canada, and south through the United States.
It winters in South America.
NHPBS inspires one million Granite Staters each month with engaging and trusted local and national programs on-air, online, in classrooms and in communities.