Fork-tailed Drongo-Cuckoo  Surniculus dicruroides

Etymology

  • Surniculus : French name , sournois – deceitful; Coucou – cuckoo { Deceitful Cuckoo}
  • Dicruroides : Dicrurus-Genus for drongo; Greek word  oidēs  -resembling

Distribution in India: Resident of Western Ghats (Kerala, Karnataka, Maharashtra), Eastern Ghats (Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Orissa), and hills of central India (Madhya Pradesh). Rajasthan & Gujarat

Description: Size of 23-25 cm; wt. of 26–43·6 g. Adult is glossy blue-black with greener wing-coverts, inner secondaries and tertials, and brownish tinge to breast, belly and vent, tail square or slightly forked, white leggings, white bands on under tail-coverts, white bar on underwing, skin around eye blackish or dark bluish grey, iris brown to dark grey, bill black is down-curved with pale yellow mouth lining, and legs and feet dark grey.. it lacks White Rictal Spot and has exposed rounded nostrils. The female is duller than male, with yellow eyes. The juvenile is dull blackish brown, with white spots on head, wings and breast, white tips to uppertail-coverts, rounded, white-tipped rectrices and often show white spots on shafts and broader white bars.

Habitat: It is found in forests, semi-evergreen, swamp and riparian ,lowland dipterocarp and peat-swamp forests and temperate forests ,scrub, forest edge and clearings, pines, disturbed forest, small forest patches, bamboo thickets, plantations, and occasionally gardens, mangroves. It is found from lowlands up to 2600 m.

Food Habits: They eat insects, caterpillars, beetles, swarming termites, spiders. They also eat fruit, like figs and banyans. Forages in foliage canopy, also perches on charred stumps and saplings in recently burned clearings, but also performs aerial sallies for swarming termites, and joins mixed-species flocks.

Breeding Habits: They breed in Apr–Jul in Assam (NE India), Apr and Jun in Bangladesh, Apr in Myanmar, May–Jul in Thai-Malay Peninsula, Apr–May on Borneo, and perhaps almost year-round on Java. They are brood-parasitic and hosts like babblers. The eggs resemble those of the hosts. The nestling has mouth-lining bright red, feet vinaceous. Fledglings and eggs of the host are evicted by its chicks.