It's a risky business being a reed warbler.
Not only do these tiny birds embark on an annual migration of some 5,000
km from their West African winter quarters to breeding grounds in the
north, but they are also 'hosts' to the cuckoo, a species that lays its
eggs in other birds' nests and takes no further part in raising its
offspring. When the cuckoo chick hatches, it pushes the reed warbler
eggs and young out of the nest. As sole occupant, it tricks its warbler
'parents' into supplying its voracious appetite until it fledges.
Lees meer: ScienceDaily
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