Date: 6/26/26 5:05 pm
From: Ramsey, Lawrence William <lwr...>
Subject: Re: Third Breeding Bird Atlas update: continued low numbers of cuckoos
Interesting! Since the pandemic stated at the end of the first quarter of 2020, I have not traveled much and have submitted an e-bird list for our property almost every day. I looked at my e-bid records for the number of days Yellow-billed Cuckoo were seen or heard from 2020 though today and got the below. Was really surprised by 2025.

Year
# of days
2026
1
2025
1
2024
24
2023
23
2022
34
2021
17
2020
17

________________________________
From: State College (PA) Bird Club <SCBIRDCL...> on behalf of Debra Rittelmann <dlrittelmann...>
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2026 4:20 PM
To: <SCBIRDCL...> <SCBIRDCL...>
Subject: Re: Third Breeding Bird Atlas update: continued low numbers of cuckoos

Ironically, my neighbor and I were just talking about this this past week; we both noticed the lack of Cuckoo calls and we've had them in the yard in the past. Also on my neighbor's farm. Hope it's not a forever thing.

Deb Rittelmann

On Fri, Jun 26, 2026 at 1:54 PM Gyekis, Joseph Peter <jpg186...><mailto:<jpg186...>> wrote:
Statewide breeding bird survey analyses over the past 30 years show significant declines for both cuckoo species.

________________________________
From: State College (PA) Bird Club <SCBIRDCL...><mailto:<SCBIRDCL...>> on behalf of Nick Bolgiano <nickbolgiano...><mailto:<nickbolgiano...>>
Sent: Friday, 26 June 2026 07:53:46
To: <SCBIRDCL...><mailto:<SCBIRDCL...> <SCBIRDCL...><mailto:<SCBIRDCL...>>
Subject: Third Breeding Bird Atlas update: continued low numbers of cuckoos

After year one of this breeding bird atlas, I sent out an email on this topic, but now we are into the third season and not much has changed. Both Yellow-billed Cuckoo and Black-billed Cuckoo continue to be reported in low numbers.

During the second Breeding Bird Atlas, in 2004-2009, Yellow-billed Cuckoo was reported in 66% of blocks while Black-billed Cuckoo was reported in 34% of blocks. In my two Breeding Bird Surveys, regular cycles have occurred, with periodic higher numbers coinciding with caterpillar outbreaks, such as spongy (formerly gypsy) moths and webworms. But, no cuckoos in my two routes during the three years of this atlas, which is unprecedented. During the atlas, I have recorded 9 Yellow-billeds and 1 Black-billeds, where I would normally have expected to record many more. (Around here, Yellow-billeds usually outnumber Black-billeds by roughly 10:1.)

To see where they have been reported so far during this atlas, bring up the atlas species on-line map:
https://ebird.org/atlaspa/map<https://nam10.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Febird.org%2Fatlaspa%2Fmap&data=05%7C02%<7CSCBIRDCL...>%7Cd505010276314882810c08ded3dfb791%7C7cf48d453ddb4389a9c1c115526eb52e%7C0%7C0%7C639181154959382741%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJFbXB0eU1hcGkiOnRydWUsIlYiOiIwLjAuMDAwMCIsIlAiOiJXaW4zMiIsIkFOIjoiTWFpbCIsIldUIjoyfQ%3D%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=BhjzFuCbuUIKlhhiEKOWgxZx69amJeEzOn1pfJWjwQo%3D&reserved=0>
Enter YBCU or BBCU to see the atlas 3 maps.

Not having many cuckoos means that PA has not experienced widespread caterpillar outbreaks, which is probably a good thing for the trees. However, the low cuckoo numbers are very atypical of what we usually find.

Nick Bolgiano
 
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