Find the word definition

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
nidicolous

of birds, "bearing young which are helpless at birth," 1920, from Modern Latin Nidicolae (1894), from Latin nidus (see nest (n.)) + colere "to inhabit" (see colony). Contrasted to nidifugous birds (1902), whose young are well-developed and leave the nest at birth (from Latin fugere "to flee").

Wiktionary
nidicolous

a. (context zoology English) Tending to stay at the nest or birthplace for a long time after birth, due to dependence on the parents for feeding and protection.

WordNet
nidicolous

adj. (of birds) remaining in the nest for a time after hatching [ant: nidifugous]

Wikipedia
Nidicolous

A nidicolous animal (from Latin: nidus "nest" and colous "inhabiting") is an animal that appears undeveloped at birth and stays at their birthplace for a long time, due to their dependence on the parents for feeding, protection and learning survival skills. They are the opposite of nidifugous species who leave their parents more quickly and survive independently. Another pair of terms to describe this developmental phenomenon, altricial and precocial, is also used by scientists.

Examples of nidicolous species are most mammals, marsupials and many species of birds. The great majority of nidicolous animals are altricial; an animal born helpless, blind and without feathers or hair, simply unable to fend for itself. During the life span, the brain of a nidicolous animal expands 8–10 times of its initial size; in nidifugous animals, from 1.5 to 2.5 times. Humans are precocial-born, nonetheless their brains, which at birth constitute 25% of their adult size, continue to expand significantly during lifetime. However, the concepts of altricial and nidicolous are not identical. All altricial animals are nidicolous by necessity, but an animal may be nidicolous, such as staying at the nest, even if it is precocial and fully capable of leaving if needed.