Over the past few months we have had a variety of Cuckoos calling and looking for a mate and the sound of any Cuckoo in Australia is completely different to the European Cuckoo. The Cuckoos in Australia call shrilly and in a frantic descending or ascending call and often you will only hear the variety of species and not actually observe them. Around Broome we have Pallid Cuckoos, Little Bronze-Cuckoo, Oriental Cuckoo, Horsefield’s Bronze Cuckoos, Brush Cuckoos and Channel-billed Cuckoos. There is also the Pheasant Coucal, which is unique in the fact that it does not put its eggs into another species of birds nest, but sits on its own eggs and raises its own young.

The Brush Cuckoo Cacomantis variolosus inhabits some of the paperbark swamps around Broome and usually when we encounter them we hear them or observe them briefly. On one occasion recently we were able to get a few minutes observing the bird which initially tried to look upwards as if it was trying to blend in with the environment, which it did well. It was a juvenile bird and no doubt its parents had used one of the many Paperbark Flycatchers nests to lay its eggs in.

The Brush Cuckoo feeds high up in the trees generally and eats insects and caterpillars, which its host parents would have been doing initially. The call of this particular bird is a very shrill persistent call with between seven and twelve descending notes. Its flight is undulating and quite distinct.

Brush Cuckoo (2)

Brush Cuckoo (3)

Brush Cuckoo (4)

Juvenile Brush Cuckoo

Once this bird reaches maturity it will be quite plain with a grey brown back, a grey breast washed buff and the tail will be quite square with white notches. The juvenile bird is a lot more colourful as above.

Hopefully over coming months I will get the opportunity to not just hear the variety of Cuckoos around Broome, but observe and photograph a few more!

Written by Clare M
Clare and her husband, Grant, have lived permanently in Broome, Western Australia since 1999 after living in various outback locations around Western Australia and Darwin. She has lived in the Middle East and the United States and traveled extensively in Europe. She monitors Pied Oystercatchers breeding along a 23km stretch of Broome's coastline by bicycle and on foot. She chooses not to participate in social media, but rather wander off into the bush for peace and tranquility. Thankfully she can write posts in advance and get away from technology!