The female lays two brown-speckled white eggs in a shallow cup nest 1-3 m high in a horizontal tree fork.
The clutch is two brown-speckled pale blue eggs, which are incubated by the female alone for 12-14 days to hatching.
The female usually lays two or three brown-speckled cream-colored eggs.
It would be almost impossible to detect the killdeer's nest, with its four brown-speckled eggs, except that the killdeer is very good at calling attention to it.
The clutch is two or three, rarely four, brown-speckled white eggs.
Cuckoos that target Dunnock nests lay white, brown-speckled eggs, in contrast to the Dunnock's own blue eggs.
The female lays two brown-speckled white eggs in a deep cup nest 7-15 m high in a tree, usually in a semi-open location.
The 3 to 4 brown-speckled blue or greenish eggs are incubated for 18-20 days by the female alone, who is fed by the male.
The female lays one white, brown-speckled egg in a shallow nest on the ground.
The female lays 3 brown-speckled pale blue-green eggs in a grassy cup nest in tall grass, and several pairs may breed close to each other in suitable areas.