Black-Billed Cuckoo

Coccyzus erythropthalmus

Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus

Characteristics

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.

Habitat

The black-billed cuckoo is found in thickets, orchards, groves of trees, marshes, and forest edges.

Diet

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.

Life Cycle

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.

Behavior

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.

Did You Know?

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The Black-Billed Cuckoo in NH

The black-billed cuckoo breeds across New Hampshire.

World Status: Least Concern

Listen Here

Andrew Spencer, xeno-canto.org
black-billed cuckoo

Range

The black-billed cuckoo breeds from Alberta, Canada, east to Nova Scotia, Canada, and south through the United States.

It winters in South America.