Theme

Hi there. I have been birding most of my life and am currently a grad student working on a bird migration study. "A bird does not sing because it has an answer. It sings because it has a song."
Archive
Message
Submit
RSS
Me
blogs
biomedicalephemera:

Hieroccoccyx crassirostris - Sulawesi Cuckoo
The Sulawesi Cuckoo (usually referred to as the Sulawesi Hawk-Cuckoo, but more related to the Typical Cuckoos) is endemic to Sulawesi Island, in Indonesia. Like the other Cuckoos, this species is what’s known as a brood parasite. While a nest is unattended by the occupants, they’ll come in, lay an egg, and leave. This is then repeated with several other nests in the area, until the clutch is laid. Depending on the species, the adult cuckoo may eject the occupant’s eggs  prior to laying her own, or the cuckoo chick may eject its nest mates once it hatches.
Because the chicks of brood parasites are larger and hatch earlier than the host’s eggs, they divert all attention from the host’s eggs. Birds (passerines especially) are pretty much “hey there’s a screaming chick, better feed it”, so little songbirds sometimes end up caring for and raising these big ol’ cuckoo chicks without knowing something’s off. Or maybe they do know and just can’t do anything about it, but who am I to tell? Host birds are at least clever enough that if a female cuckoo lays her egg in the nest of a bird that has differently-colored eggs from her, they other bird typically ejects the cuckoo egg and lays another clutch of her own.
Transactions of the Zoological Society of London. 1874.

biomedicalephemera:

Hieroccoccyx crassirostris - Sulawesi Cuckoo

The Sulawesi Cuckoo (usually referred to as the Sulawesi Hawk-Cuckoo, but more related to the Typical Cuckoos) is endemic to Sulawesi Island, in Indonesia. Like the other Cuckoos, this species is what’s known as a brood parasite. While a nest is unattended by the occupants, they’ll come in, lay an egg, and leave. This is then repeated with several other nests in the area, until the clutch is laid. Depending on the species, the adult cuckoo may eject the occupant’s eggs prior to laying her own, or the cuckoo chick may eject its nest mates once it hatches.

Because the chicks of brood parasites are larger and hatch earlier than the host’s eggs, they divert all attention from the host’s eggs. Birds (passerines especially) are pretty much “hey there’s a screaming chick, better feed it”, so little songbirds sometimes end up caring for and raising these big ol’ cuckoo chicks without knowing something’s off. Or maybe they do know and just can’t do anything about it, but who am I to tell? Host birds are at least clever enough that if a female cuckoo lays her egg in the nest of a bird that has differently-colored eggs from her, they other bird typically ejects the cuckoo egg and lays another clutch of her own.

Transactions of the Zoological Society of London. 1874.

53 notes
  1. sniffmental reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  2. valerievstheworld reblogged this from thegallowspole
  3. thegallowspole reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  4. iloveablank reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  5. nuclearbong reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  6. flaming-dino reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  7. f-simplynature reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  8. cam-aroony reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  9. a0e0b0rcdangerous-a-n-i-m-al reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  10. asktheghosthost reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  11. gangfille reblogged this from vertetasses
  12. membranoproliferative reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  13. vertetasses reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  14. feathersandbeaks reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  15. ahnika-te reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  16. neuroconnoisseur reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
  17. biomedicalephemera posted this