A parasitic relationship. The cucko lays its eggs in a warbler (E.g Reed warbler)
they are consumers
The animal that has a symbiotic relationship with a cuckoo is the warbler. The warbler first lays its egg in the nest that it builds, and the cuckoo lays one of its eggs in the same nest when the adult goes off to feed.
Well many eggs are needed It depends what eggs they are If they are chicken eggs then you will need more than if they were goose eggs So that's your answer xD
DEPENDS ON HOW LARGE THE EGGS ARE
A parasitic relationship. The cucko lays its eggs in a warbler (E.g Reed warbler)
The Kirtland warbler's eggs are cream colored which are speckled with brown. The eggs are typically laid in a number of either four or five.
a warbler provides a cuckoo with a nest to hold its eggs. it also provides a cuckoo with food.
When a reed warbler makes its nest and lays its eggs, a cuckoo later comes to lay HER eggs in the warbler's nest while the parent warbler is away. The cuckoo does this so that the warbler can take care of the her chick instead. The warbler takes absolutely no notice of what's happened and takes care of her eggs. When the cuckoo chick has hatched, it usually pushes away the rest of the chicks and eggs out of the nest so that it has a survival advantage. So the parent warbler usually ends up losing all of her eggs and raising one cuckoo chick even after the chick has grown 3 times as big as the warbler.
They are summer residents of the Southern provinces of Canada.
3333 years
The yellow rumped warbler breeds in the Northern U.S. and Canada, and winters in the Southern U.S. and Mexico.
I can only narrow that down possibly to a Cape May Warbler, Canada Warbler, Magnolia Warbler, or Kirtland's Warbler.
The mourning warbler nests in summer in the northern U.S. and Canada. It winters in Central America, sometimes further.
The cuckoo is a parasitic bird (with only a few exceptions), meaning it relies on other birds to nurture its chicks. So the relationship between a cuckoo and a warbler is that the cuckoo lays one of its eggs in the warbler's nest and the warbler ends up raising a cuckoo chick.
A parasitic relationship. The Cuckoo lays its egg in a warblers (E.g. Reed warbler) nest and the cuckoo hatch-ling expels the eggs of the warbler. Therefore one species (the Cuckoo) benefits and the other one is at a disadvantage (the warbler). So the symbiotic relationship is parasitic.
Canary, goldfinch, yellow warbler, prothonotary warbler, Wilson's warbler, Bachman's warbler, prairie warbler, pine warbler, western tanager, common yellowthroat, yellow breasted chat. Many warbler specie's plumage contain yellow to some degree.