Movement The Puerto Rican lizard cuckoo sits motionless for long periods and is more often heard than seen. It is non-migratory.
Feeding The Puerto Rican lizard cuckoo mostly forages for prey from the middle to upper layers of the forest, though it also hunts in the understory and on the ground. It hunts by stealth, climbing along tree branches or walking on the ground. Its principal food is lizards (especially
Anolis) and also includes adult and larval insects, eggs, and occasionally frogs.
Breeding Almost nothing is known about the Puerto Rican lizard cuckoo's breeding
phenology. Its nest is a loose platform made of sticks and placed in a tree or large bush. The clutch size is two or three eggs.
Vocalization The Puerto Rican lizard cuckoo's principal call is " a harsh series of
ka-ka-ka-ka notes." The call is described in more detail as "an emphatic
ka-ka-ka-ka of long duration gradually accelerating and becoming louder, sometimes with altered syllables at the end". The species also makes other calls likened to those of jays, crows, ravens, and doves. A local name for the Puerto Rican lizard cuckoo is
pájaro bobo mayor, "big ape bird", apparently because it sounds like a monkey. It is also called
pájaro de lluvia or
pájaro de agua ("rain bird") in the belief that its call forecasts rain. ==Status==