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Pacific long-tailed cuckoo

The Pacific long-tailed cuckoo (Urodynamis taitensis), also known as the long-tailed cuckoo, long-tailed koel, sparrow hawk, home owl, screecher, screamer[2] or koekoeā in Māori, is a species of the Cuculidae bird family (the cuckoos). It is a migratory bird that spends spring and summer in New Zealand, its only breeding place, and spends winter in the Pacific islands. It is a brood parasite, laying its eggs in the nests of other bird species and leaving them to raise its chicks.

Long-tailed cuckoo
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Cuculiformes
Family: Cuculidae
Genus: Urodynamis
Salvadori, 1880
Species:
U. taitensis
Binomial name
Urodynamis taitensis
(Sparrman, 1787)
Synonyms

Cuculus taitensis
Eudynamys taitensis

Taxonomy edit

Urodynamis taitensis is most closely related to the channel-billed cuckoo (Scythrops novaehollandiae), which lives in Australia, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, according to Sorenson and Payne (2005).[3] Accordingly, it is not part of the Eudynamys genus (the true koels), with which it has previously been placed.

Description edit

The long-tailed cuckoo is approximately 40–42 cm in length, with a wingspan of approximately 47–52 cm, and weighs about 120 grams. It has broad pointed wings and a long tail that is softly rounded at the tip. Its beak is short and stout with a slightly hooked tip. It has brown barring to brown upperparts, and dark streaking to white underparts. Both males and females share similar features. A juvenile cuckoo is markedly different from the adult: it is spotted, with buff underneath and on the sides of the head and neck.

Adult. Top of head and hindneck, dark brown, boldly streaked buff. Supercilium, White's, bordered below by bold dark-brown eye stripe continuing downsides of neck, cheeks, chin, throat and foreneck, whites with thin brown stripes and fine black streaking on near neck and throat. The remainder of the upperparts are brown with white spotting on wing. Tail is tipped white. The underbody is white with course black brown streaking. Legs and feet are gray to green.[2]

Long-tailed cuckoo have a loud and intense sound, a "shrill whistle"; it is sometimes called the "screamer".[4]

Distribution and habitat edit

Endemic to New Zealand,[2] where they can be found on Little Barrier Island,[5] the West Coast of the South Island, Nelson, and throughout the central North Island.

Long-tailed cuckoo prefer to live in forest on mainland and near shore or offshore islands, from sea level. in mountainous areas, more often on vegetated ridges than in valleys.[6][7][8] Usually in dense, closed canopy of native forests dominated by beech Nothofagus, broadleaf species or podocarps or mixtures, with or without shrub layer.[9][10] Usually surrounded by plantations of Pines (Pinus). Can be around other vegetation such as manuka Lepotospermum scoparium by rivers or forests or mountainous areas.[11] Occasionally can be found in recreational parks, residential areas and gardens.[12]

In New Zealand the cuckoos live mainly in native forest, particularly up in the canopy. They also live in exotic pine plantations, scrub, cultivated land and suburban gardens. In the Pacific islands they live in lowland forest, gardens and coconut plantations. Individuals are usually solitary.[13]

The long-tailed cuckoo breeds only in New Zealand, where it is resident in the warmer months, from early October until February or March, sometimes April and occasionally later.[13] The length of an average one-way journey from New Zealand to Polynesia is around 2500-3500 kilometers [14] and thus travel over 6000 kilometers.[15] For winter it migrates to islands right across the southern Pacific. It is found year-round on the Kermadec Islands, the Norfolk Island group and the Lord Howe Island group, which are subtropical islands part way between the New Zealand mainland and the tropical Pacific Islands.[16] The spread of its winter distribution is extraordinarily wide, stretching almost 11,000 km from Palau in the west to Pitcairn Island.[16] Over most of its winter range, it is known by the indigenous name, kārewarewa (or local variations of this).[17] In spring, the bird's routes of migration would almost certainly have served to guide the Polynesian ancestors of Māori to find New Zealand.[17][18]

Behaviour edit

Breeding edit

Long-tailed cuckoo have many partners during their lifetime. They mate and break-up easily. Males gain attraction from females through spanning their wings and fluttering them whilst calling.[2]

Male cuckoo have a high pitched sound and they are very territorial. You will hear them calling either to make known their territory to other birds or as a call for a mate. Female cuckoo are similar in their vocal intensity. Their behaviour is sexual and combative when mating. Male often display their wings or their ability to fly well when looking for a mate.[2]

Cuckoos do not build their own nest or rear their young. The species is a brood parasite[19] laying its eggs in the nests of Mohoua species mostly – whiteheads (M. albicilla) in the North Island and yellowheads (M. ochrocephala) and brown creepers (M. novaeseelandiae) in the South Island. They also lay in robin (Petroica australis longpipes) and tomtit (Petroica macrocephala toitoi) nests.[20] The eggs hatch before those of the host and the young chicks eject the eggs of the host. Long-tailed cuckoo chicks are able to mimic the calls of their host's chicks.

Feeding edit

Long-tailed cuckoo eat mostly insects. They also eat bird eggs and nestling birds, adult birds as large as sparrows, New Zealand bellbirds and thrushes, and lizards. They occasionally eat fruit and seeds.[13][20][21] Young birds are fed insects by their host parents.

Long-tailed cuckoo hardly ever forage on the ground however they do forage and the top of trees or in shrubs. Foraging is mainly done at night.[22]

Predators edit

Long-tailed cuckoo are an at risk species in New Zealand and are very uncommon.[20] Predators include rats and stoats.[23]

In culture edit

Māori believed that the arrival of long-tailed cuckoos indicated that it was time to plant sweet potato or kumara, and that their departure meant it was time to harvest them.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2016). "Urodynamis taitensis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T22684072A93012929. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T22684072A93012929.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e Davis, William E. (September 2001). "Handbook of Australian, New Zealand, and Antarctic Birds, Volume 4: Parrots to Dollarbird". The Wilson Bulletin. 113 (3): 359–360. doi:10.1676/0043-5643(2001)113[0359:ol]2.0.co;2. ISSN 0043-5643. S2CID 85784425.
  3. ^ Sorenson, Michael D.; Payne, Robert B. (2005). "A molecular genetic analysis of cuckoo phylogeny". In Payne, Robert B. The Cuckoos. Oxford University Press. p. 93. ISBN 0-19-850213-3.
  4. ^ a b Andersen, Johannes C. (1926). Bird-Song and New Zealand Song Birds. Whitcombe & Tombs. pp. 180–182. OCLC 771056654.
  5. ^ McLean, I.G. (1988). "Breeding behaviour of the long-tailed cuckoo on Little Barrier Island". Notornis. 35: 89–98.
  6. ^ Sibson, R.B. (1949). NZ Bird Notes. pp. 3: 151–5.
  7. ^ Dawson, E.W. (1950). "Bird notes from Little Barrier". Notornis. 4 (2): 29.
  8. ^ Penniket, J.G. (1955). Handbook of Australian, New Zealand & Antarctic Birds Volume 6. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. pp. 171–5.
  9. ^ Blackburn, A (1965). Notornis. pp. 12:191–207.
  10. ^ Challies, C.N. (1962). Notornis. pp. 10:118–27.
  11. ^ Guy, G (1947). NZ Bird Notes. pp. 2:132.
  12. ^ Guest & Guest, G (1993). Notornis. pp. 40:137–41.
  13. ^ a b c Cunningham, J.M. (1985). "Long-tailed Cuckoo". Reader's Digest Complete Book of New Zealand Birds. p. 255. ISBN 0474000486.
  14. ^ Elphick, J (1995). The Atlas of Bird Migration. Sydney, Australia: Reader's Digest.
  15. ^ Dorst, J (1962). The Migrations of Birds. London, England: Heinemann, London.
  16. ^ a b Gill, B.J.; Hauber, Mark E. (2012). "Piecing together the epic transoceanic migration of the Long-tailed Cuckoo (Eudynamys taitensis): an analysis of museum and sighting records". Emu - Austral Ornithology. 112 (4): 328. doi:10.1071/MU12022. S2CID 85717933.
  17. ^ a b Crowe, Andrew (2018). Pathway of the Birds: The Voyaging Achievements of Māori and their Polynesian Ancestors. Auckland: David Bateman Ltd. pp. 106, 149, 150.
  18. ^ Taonui, Rāwiri (8 February 2005). "Canoe navigation – Locating land". Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  19. ^ Gill, B.J. (2013). Long-tailed Cuckoo. New Zealand: NZ Birds online.
  20. ^ a b c Fulton, R (1904). The Kohoperoa or Koekoea, Longtailed Cuckoo (Urodynamustantensis): an account of its habits, description of a nest containing its egg, and a suggestion as to how the parasitic habit in birds has become established. Trans. N.Z. pp. 36:113–148.
  21. ^ McLean, I.G. (1988). "Whitehead breeding and parasitism by Long-tailed Cuckoos". Notornis. 29: 156–158.
  22. ^ Turbott, E.G. (1967). Buller's Birds of New Zealand. Christchurch, New Zealand: Whitcombe & Tombs.
  23. ^ "Long-tailed cuckoo". New Zealand Forest Owners Association. Retrieved 18 August 2021.
  • Davies, N. (2000). Cuckoos, Cowbirds and Other Cheats. T & A D Poyser, London, ISBN 0-85661-135-2

External links edit

  •   Media related to Urodynamis taitensis at Wikimedia Commons
  • Urodynamis taitensis discussed on RNZ Critter of the Week, 12 May 2023

pacific, long, tailed, cuckoo, long, tailed, cuckoo, redirects, here, african, long, tailed, cuckoos, cercococcyx, urodynamis, taitensis, also, known, long, tailed, cuckoo, long, tailed, koel, sparrow, hawk, home, screecher, screamer, koekoeā, māori, species, . Long tailed cuckoo redirects here For the African long tailed cuckoos see Cercococcyx The Pacific long tailed cuckoo Urodynamis taitensis also known as the long tailed cuckoo long tailed koel sparrow hawk home owl screecher screamer 2 or koekoea in Maori is a species of the Cuculidae bird family the cuckoos It is a migratory bird that spends spring and summer in New Zealand its only breeding place and spends winter in the Pacific islands It is a brood parasite laying its eggs in the nests of other bird species and leaving them to raise its chicks Long tailed cuckoo Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Cuculiformes Family Cuculidae Genus UrodynamisSalvadori 1880 Species U taitensis Binomial name Urodynamis taitensis Sparrman 1787 Synonyms Cuculus taitensisEudynamys taitensis Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Feeding 5 Predators 6 In culture 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editUrodynamis taitensis is most closely related to the channel billed cuckoo Scythrops novaehollandiae which lives in Australia Papua New Guinea and Indonesia according to Sorenson and Payne 2005 3 Accordingly it is not part of the Eudynamys genus the true koels with which it has previously been placed Description editThe long tailed cuckoo is approximately 40 42 cm in length with a wingspan of approximately 47 52 cm and weighs about 120 grams It has broad pointed wings and a long tail that is softly rounded at the tip Its beak is short and stout with a slightly hooked tip It has brown barring to brown upperparts and dark streaking to white underparts Both males and females share similar features A juvenile cuckoo is markedly different from the adult it is spotted with buff underneath and on the sides of the head and neck Adult Top of head and hindneck dark brown boldly streaked buff Supercilium White s bordered below by bold dark brown eye stripe continuing downsides of neck cheeks chin throat and foreneck whites with thin brown stripes and fine black streaking on near neck and throat The remainder of the upperparts are brown with white spotting on wing Tail is tipped white The underbody is white with course black brown streaking Legs and feet are gray to green 2 Long tailed cuckoo have a loud and intense sound a shrill whistle it is sometimes called the screamer 4 Distribution and habitat editEndemic to New Zealand 2 where they can be found on Little Barrier Island 5 the West Coast of the South Island Nelson and throughout the central North Island Long tailed cuckoo prefer to live in forest on mainland and near shore or offshore islands from sea level in mountainous areas more often on vegetated ridges than in valleys 6 7 8 Usually in dense closed canopy of native forests dominated by beech Nothofagus broadleaf species or podocarps or mixtures with or without shrub layer 9 10 Usually surrounded by plantations of Pines Pinus Can be around other vegetation such as manuka Lepotospermum scoparium by rivers or forests or mountainous areas 11 Occasionally can be found in recreational parks residential areas and gardens 12 In New Zealand the cuckoos live mainly in native forest particularly up in the canopy They also live in exotic pine plantations scrub cultivated land and suburban gardens In the Pacific islands they live in lowland forest gardens and coconut plantations Individuals are usually solitary 13 The long tailed cuckoo breeds only in New Zealand where it is resident in the warmer months from early October until February or March sometimes April and occasionally later 13 The length of an average one way journey from New Zealand to Polynesia is around 2500 3500 kilometers 14 and thus travel over 6000 kilometers 15 For winter it migrates to islands right across the southern Pacific It is found year round on the Kermadec Islands the Norfolk Island group and the Lord Howe Island group which are subtropical islands part way between the New Zealand mainland and the tropical Pacific Islands 16 The spread of its winter distribution is extraordinarily wide stretching almost 11 000 km from Palau in the west to Pitcairn Island 16 Over most of its winter range it is known by the indigenous name karewarewa or local variations of this 17 In spring the bird s routes of migration would almost certainly have served to guide the Polynesian ancestors of Maori to find New Zealand 17 18 Behaviour editBreeding edit Long tailed cuckoo have many partners during their lifetime They mate and break up easily Males gain attraction from females through spanning their wings and fluttering them whilst calling 2 Male cuckoo have a high pitched sound and they are very territorial You will hear them calling either to make known their territory to other birds or as a call for a mate Female cuckoo are similar in their vocal intensity Their behaviour is sexual and combative when mating Male often display their wings or their ability to fly well when looking for a mate 2 Cuckoos do not build their own nest or rear their young The species is a brood parasite 19 laying its eggs in the nests of Mohoua species mostly whiteheads M albicilla in the North Island and yellowheads M ochrocephala and brown creepers M novaeseelandiae in the South Island They also lay in robin Petroica australis longpipes and tomtit Petroica macrocephala toitoi nests 20 The eggs hatch before those of the host and the young chicks eject the eggs of the host Long tailed cuckoo chicks are able to mimic the calls of their host s chicks Feeding edit Long tailed cuckoo eat mostly insects They also eat bird eggs and nestling birds adult birds as large as sparrows New Zealand bellbirds and thrushes and lizards They occasionally eat fruit and seeds 13 20 21 Young birds are fed insects by their host parents Long tailed cuckoo hardly ever forage on the ground however they do forage and the top of trees or in shrubs Foraging is mainly done at night 22 Predators editLong tailed cuckoo are an at risk species in New Zealand and are very uncommon 20 Predators include rats and stoats 23 In culture editMaori believed that the arrival of long tailed cuckoos indicated that it was time to plant sweet potato or kumara and that their departure meant it was time to harvest them 4 References edit BirdLife International 2016 Urodynamis taitensis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22684072A93012929 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22684072A93012929 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b c d e Davis William E September 2001 Handbook of Australian New Zealand and Antarctic Birds Volume 4 Parrots to Dollarbird The Wilson Bulletin 113 3 359 360 doi 10 1676 0043 5643 2001 113 0359 ol 2 0 co 2 ISSN 0043 5643 S2CID 85784425 Sorenson Michael D Payne Robert B 2005 A molecular genetic analysis of cuckoo phylogeny In Payne Robert B The Cuckoos Oxford University Press p 93 ISBN 0 19 850213 3 a b Andersen Johannes C 1926 Bird Song and New Zealand Song Birds Whitcombe amp Tombs pp 180 182 OCLC 771056654 McLean I G 1988 Breeding behaviour of the long tailed cuckoo on Little Barrier Island Notornis 35 89 98 Sibson R B 1949 NZ Bird Notes pp 3 151 5 Dawson E W 1950 Bird notes from Little Barrier Notornis 4 2 29 Penniket J G 1955 Handbook of Australian New Zealand amp Antarctic Birds Volume 6 Melbourne Oxford University Press pp 171 5 Blackburn A 1965 Notornis pp 12 191 207 Challies C N 1962 Notornis pp 10 118 27 Guy G 1947 NZ Bird Notes pp 2 132 Guest amp Guest G 1993 Notornis pp 40 137 41 a b c Cunningham J M 1985 Long tailed Cuckoo Reader s Digest Complete Book of New Zealand Birds p 255 ISBN 0474000486 Elphick J 1995 The Atlas of Bird Migration Sydney Australia Reader s Digest Dorst J 1962 The Migrations of Birds London England Heinemann London a b Gill B J Hauber Mark E 2012 Piecing together the epic transoceanic migration of the Long tailed Cuckoo Eudynamys taitensis an analysis of museum and sighting records Emu Austral Ornithology 112 4 328 doi 10 1071 MU12022 S2CID 85717933 a b Crowe Andrew 2018 Pathway of the Birds The Voyaging Achievements of Maori and their Polynesian Ancestors Auckland David Bateman Ltd pp 106 149 150 Taonui Rawiri 8 February 2005 Canoe navigation Locating land Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 30 June 2019 Gill B J 2013 Long tailed Cuckoo New Zealand NZ Birds online a b c Fulton R 1904 The Kohoperoa or Koekoea Longtailed Cuckoo Urodynamustantensis an account of its habits description of a nest containing its egg and a suggestion as to how the parasitic habit in birds has become established Trans N Z pp 36 113 148 McLean I G 1988 Whitehead breeding and parasitism by Long tailed Cuckoos Notornis 29 156 158 Turbott E G 1967 Buller s Birds of New Zealand Christchurch New Zealand Whitcombe amp Tombs Long tailed cuckoo New Zealand Forest Owners Association Retrieved 18 August 2021 Davies N 2000 Cuckoos Cowbirds and Other Cheats T amp A D Poyser London ISBN 0 85661 135 2External links edit nbsp Media related to Urodynamis taitensis at Wikimedia Commons Urodynamis taitensis discussed on RNZ Critter of the Week 12 May 2023 Portals nbsp Birds nbsp New Zealand Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pacific long tailed cuckoo amp oldid 1211856602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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