Used
with permission from Dick Watling from Birds of Fiji, Tonga and Samoa
and Birds of Fiji and Western Polynesia (Pacificbirds.com).
The
aleva is a hard bird to see, usually creeping without a sound through dense
foliage. In fact, we most often see aleva because they are being chased by other
birds, especially the iao (Wattled Honeyeater). Iao seem to hate aleva,
and chase them vigorously, with loud scolding cries. It is very interesting to
try to figure out why they do this. There are at least three possibilities. It
may be that aleva will eat eggs if they get the chance; however, this has
never been observed. Second, in flight the aleva looks much like a hawk,
with its pointed wings and long tail. Perhaps iao mistake the aleva
for a hawk, and think they are chasing a dangerous predator away. But there are
no hawks in Samoa. Therefore, this explanation would mean that iao still
have an instinctive fear of hawk-like birds thousands of years after they last
saw a hawk (which was probably when the ancestors of our iao came here
from Fiji). The last explanation seems even more far-fetched. This is that the
iao chases the aleva because it is afraid that the cuckoo will lay its
eggs in the iao's nest. To understand this possibility, we must discuss
the strange breeding behavior of the aleva.
Like many other members
of the cuckoo family, the aleva is a nest parasite. This means that it
secretly lays its eggs in other birds' nests. The unlucky host birds think that
the cuckoo egg is their own, and raise it alongside their own babies. Usually
the baby cuckoo is much larger than the babies of its hosts, who are unable to
compete and starve to death. Many New Zealand birds, including honeyeaters related
to the iao, recognize the aleva and chase it away. This makes a
lot of sense in New Zealand, where the aleva breeds. But the aleva
never breeds on its wintering grounds in Polynesia. Therefore, the iao
has no reason to fear that the aleva will lay eggs in its nest. Could there be
an instinctive hatred of cuckoos in all members of the honeyeater family? Like
many questions in biology, this one would be hard to answer, but it's still fun
to think about.
Many older Samoans say that aleva used to be much
more common than they are today. The aleva is now a rare sight on Tutuila.
It's hard to know just how rare the bird really is because of its secretive habits.
If you see one, consider yourself lucky, and take a moment to think about the
many mysteries in the life of this strange visitor to our shores.
In
fact, it is the only land bird to migrate north to spend the winter with us (although
a few aleva may be found here year-round). The aleva's winter range
extends all the way from Palau on the west to Pitcairn Island on the east, but
the largest numbers winter in Fiji, Samoa, and Tonga. Here it can be found on
any island, from the mountainous interiors of the largest high islands to the
coastal vegetation of tiny atolls. Wherever it ends up, the aleva feeds
mostly on large insects, including caterpillars and stick insects, but also small
lizards.
The
aleva or Long-tailed Cuckoo is a very odd bird, no doubt about it. For
one thing, when the weather starts to get cold in its summer home, the aleva
migrates north for the winter. For another, it has a highly unusual home
life: it doesn't build its own nest or care for its own young, but abandons its
eggs in the nests of other birds, to be raised not only by strangers, but by completely
different kinds of birds. The aleva lives and breeds in New Zealand for
half of the year. But when winter approaches, around March or April, the aleva
leaves its chilly home islands, and flies north into sunny Polynesia.
43. Our strange winter
visitor, the Cuckoo (aleva)