Biology:Piaya

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Piaya is a small genus of relatively large and long-tailed cuckoos, which occur in Mexico, Central America and South America.

Taxonomy

The genus Piaya was introduced in 1830 by the French naturalist René Lesson with the type species as Cuculus cayanus Linnaeus 1766, the common squirrel cuckoo.[1][2] The genus name is from the Cayenne Creole name Piaye, the devil bird, for the common squirrel cuckoo.[3]

Species

The genus contains three species:[4]

Image Common name Scientific name Distribution
120px Common squirrel cuckoo Piaya cayana 120px
120px Mexican squirrel cuckoo Piaya mexicana Pacific slope of Mexico (Sinaloa to Isthmus of Tehuántepec)
120px Black-bellied cuckoo Piaya melanogaster 120px

The little cuckoo has been found to be closer to some species traditionally placed in Coccyzus or Micrococcyx. These are now again separated in Coccycua.

Description and ecology

These birds are birds with relatively slender bodies, long tails and strong legs. The black-bellied cuckoo is essentially restricted to rainforest, but the more widespread squirrel cuckoo also occurs in other forest types, woodlands or mangroves.

Piaya cuckoos, unlike many Old World species, are not brood parasites; they build their own nests in trees and lay two eggs. Parasitic cuckoos lay coloured eggs to match those of their passerine hosts, but the non-parasitic Piaya species, like most other non-passerines, lay white eggs.

These are vocal species 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). Squirrel and black-bellied cuckoos are large and powerful species, and occasionally take vertebrate prey such as small lizards.

References

  1. Lesson, René (1830) (in French). Traité d'Ornithologie, ou Tableau Méthodique. Paris: F.G. Levrault. pp. 139-140, livraison 2. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/35997123.  Published in 8 livraisons (parts) between 1830 and 1831. For the publication date see: Dickinson, E.C.; Overstreet, L.K.; Dowsett, R.J.; Bruce, M.D. (2011). Priority! The Dating of Scientific Names in Ornithology: a Directory to the literature and its reviewers. Northampton, UK: Aves Press. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-9568611-1-5. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/267763194. 
  2. Peters, James Lee, ed (1940). Check-List of Birds of the World. 4. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 44. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/14476515. 
  3. Jobling, James A.. "Piaya". The Key to Scientific Names. Cornell Lab of Ornithology. https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/key-to-scientific-names/search?q=Piaya. 
  4. AviList Core Team (2025). "AviList: The Global Avian Checklist, v2025". doi:10.2173/avilist.v2025. http://www.avilist.org/checklist/v2025/. 

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