Koekoeā's winter range

winter range map for long tailed cuckoo

Koekoeā's winter range

Dr Sparrman and J.R. Forster, who accompanied Captain Cook during his second voyage, first discovered the long-tailed cuckoo at Tahiti in August 1773. In February, 1777 when Cook touched Queen Charlotte's Sound in New Zealand on his last voyage, we find mention of this species once again, the first report of this species in New Zealand.

The Whitney South Seas Expedition during the years 1921 - 1933 collected a number of specimens of the long-tailed cuckoo from a wide range of localities. Information on unpublished material of other museums was also available. All in all, information was gathered from over 200 specimens from the range outside New Zealand, 130 of which are in the American Museum of Natural History, including the Rothschild collection. From this the map of its winter range was drawn.

 — Narena Olliver, Greytown, April, 2007

 

long-tail cuckoo

Gregory Mathews's, The Birds of Norfolk & Lord Howe Islands and the Australasian South Polar Quadrant, published in 1928,

Taxonomy  
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Cuculiformes
Family: Cuculidae
Genera: Eudynamys
Species: taitensis
Sub Species: californica, brunnescens
Other common names:  —

Kohoperoa, bronze cuckoo, long-tailed koel, screamer.

Description:  — 

Endemic bird

40 cm., 125 g., upperparts rich brown barred with black, underparts buff streaked with brown and black; the sexes are alike.

Where to find:  — 

Widespread but not common.

More Information:  — 

Main page  (Koekoea, Long-tailed cuckoo)

Poetry:  — 

Ko te uri au i te whenakonako
I te koekoea.
E riro nei ma te tataihore e whangai.


I am the offspring of the bronze cuckoo,
Of the long-tailed cuckoo,
Left here for the white-head to feed.
 

Illustration description: — 

Gregory Mathews's, The Birds of Norfolk & Lord Howe Islands and the Australasian South Polar Quadrant, published in 1928,

Reference(s): — 

Birds Collected During the Whitney South Seas Expedition, Americam Museum Novitates, July 6, 1937.

Page date & version: — 

Thursday, 25 September, 2025; ver2023v1