These
birds are of variable size with slender bodies, long tails and strong legs. Many have black and white undertail patterns. They occur in a variety of forests, woodlands or
mangroves.
Coccyzus cuckoos, unlike many
Old World species, build their own nests in trees and lay two or more eggs.
Yellow-billed and
black-billed cuckoos occasionally lay
eggs in the nests of other birds, but are not obligate
brood parasites like the
common cuckoo of Eurasia. Northern species such as yellow-billed and black-billed cuckoos are strong
migrants, wintering in
Central or
South America, and occasionally wander to western
Europe as rare vagrants, but the tropical
Coccyzus cuckoos are mainly sedentary. These are vocal species when breeding, with persistent and loud calls. They feed on large
insects such as
cicadas,
wasps and
caterpillars (including those with stinging hairs or spines which are distasteful to many birds). Lizard cuckoos are large and powerful species, and mainly take
vertebrate prey, especially, as the name implies,
lizards. ==References==