Woodhouse's scrub jay

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Woodhouse's scrub jay
In Santa Fe, New Mexico

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Corvidae
Genus: Aphelocoma
Species:
A. woodhouseii
Binomial name
Aphelocoma woodhouseii
(Baird, SF, 1858)
Subspecies

See text

Woodhouse's scrub jay (Aphelocoma

scrub jay native to western North America, ranging from southeastern Oregon and southern Idaho to central Mexico. Woodhouse's scrub jay was until recently considered the same species as the California scrub jay, and collectively called the western scrub jay. Prior to that both of them were also considered the same species as the island scrub jay and the Florida scrub jay; the taxon was then called simply the scrub jay.[2] Woodhouse's scrub jay is nonmigratory and can be found in urban areas, where it can become tame and will come to bird feeders. While many refer to scrub jays as "blue jays", the blue jay is a different species of bird entirely. Woodhouse's scrub jay is named for the American naturalist and explorer Samuel Washington Woodhouse
.

Description

Woodhouse's scrub jay is a medium-sized bird, approximately 27–31 cm (11–12 in) in length (including its tail), with a 39 cm (15 in) wingspan, and about 80 g (2.8 oz) in weight. The species has a blue head, wings, and tail; a gray-brown back; and grayish underparts. The throat is whitish with a partial blue breast band ("necklace"). The call is described as "harsh and scratchy". Compared to the California scrub jay, Woodhouse's has a duller blue, darker gray underparts, a less distinct blue necklace, and a straighter bill.[3]

Habitat

True to its name, Woodhouse's scrub jay inhabits areas of low scrub, preferring pinon-juniper forests, oak woods, edges of mixed evergreen forests, and sometimes mesquite bosques. Woodhouse's scrub jays are very common west of the southern Rocky Mountains, and can be found in scrub-brush, boreal forests, and temperate forests.

Foraging

Woodhouse's scrub jays usually forage in pairs, family groups, or small non-kin groups, outside of the breeding season. They feed on small animals, such as frogs and lizards, eggs and young of other birds, insects, and (particularly in winter) grains, nuts, and berries. They can be aggressive towards other birds, for example, they have been known to steal hoarded acorns from Acorn Woodpecker granary trees.

Food storing

Woodhouse's scrub jays, like many other

ticks and other parasites present on the deer. The deer seem to appreciate the help, often standing still and holding up their ears to give the jays access.[8] The scrub jay even will eat peanuts off a human hand.[citation needed
]

Intelligence

Recent research has suggested that Woodhouse's scrub jays, along with several other

corvids, are among the most intelligent of animals. The brain-to-body mass ratio of adult scrub jays rivals that of chimpanzees and cetaceans, and is dwarfed only by that of humans. Scrub jays are also the only non-primate or non-dolphin shown to plan ahead for the future, which was previously thought of as a uniquely human trait.[9] Other studies have shown that they can remember locations of over 200 food caches, as well as the food item in each cache and its rate of decay.[10] To protect their caches from pilfering conspecifics, scrub-jays will choose locations out-of-sight of their competitors, or re-cache caches once they are alone, suggesting that they can take into account the perspective of others.[6]

Nesting

The chicks start off fully gray. The older they get, the more they turn blue. On their heads, chicks tend to have a red crest that resembles a comb (Mostly seen on chickens). The chick will lose its crest at day seven, just like the way the baby chickens lose their egg tooth at 5–7 days. Nests are built low in trees or bushes, 1–10 m (3.3–32.8 ft) above the ground, primarily by the female, while the male guards her efforts. The nests are sturdy, with an outside diameter of 33–58 cm (13–23 in), constructed on a platform of twigs with moss and dry grasses lined with fine roots and hair. Four to six eggs are laid from March through July, with some regional variations. There are two common shell color variations: pale green with irregular, olive-colored spots or markings; and pale grayish-white to green with reddish-brown spots. The female incubates the eggs for about 16 days. The young leave the nest about 18 days after hatching.

Life span

The life span of wild Woodhouse's scrub jays is approximately 9 years.

Diseases

Populations are being adversely affected by the West Nile virus.

Phylogeny

The Woodhouse's, California, island, and Florida scrub jay were once considered

sequence data, there are two clades, namely a Pacific one west and one east of the Rocky Mountains.[citation needed
]

Woodhouse's scrub jay differs in plumage (paler blue above, with an indistinct and usually incomplete breast band) from the California scrub jay, which are darker blue above with a strongly defined–but not necessarily complete–blue breast band.

A subgroup of Woodhouse's scrub jay living in interior southern Mexico is sometimes called Sumichrast's scrub jay.

The subspecies are:[2]

Woodhouse's scrub jay, Aphelocoma (woodhouseii) woodhouseii

  • Aphelocoma woodhouseii nevadae Pitelka, 1945aNevada scrub jay
Great Basin from N Nevada southwards, some isolated mountain ranges in Death Valley and Mojave Desert from E California to the SW of New Mexico, south to NE Sonora and extreme NW Chihuahua. Some hybridization with A. w. oocleptica (californica group) at the north-western edge of its range.
Lighter and duller than woodhouseii; light blue undertail coverts. Bill longish, quite pointed, and tapering, not hooked at tip.
  • Aphelocoma woodhouseii woodhouseii (Baird, 1858) - Woodhouse's scrub jay
Rocky Mountains foothills, from N Utah/S Wyoming south through NW Chihuahua and W Texas, sometimes ranging farther into that state.
Blue of neck with dull grayish hue; back grayish brown. Undertail coverts blue. Bill heavy but straight, hardly hooked at tip.
  • Aphelocoma woodhouseii texana Ridgway, 1902Texas scrub jay
Hitherto only known from Edwards Plateau (Texas); area and extent of possible contact with woodhouseii undetermined. Possibly this subspecies at Caprock Escarpment, where species settled in the 1950s.
Darker than woodhouseii with hint of breast collar. Lower breast with brownish hue, large white patch on lower belly. Undertail coverts white; in adult males usually with some blue feather tips. Back quite brown. Young birds conspicuously paler than in woodhouseii. Heavy, fairly blunt bill.
  • Aphelocoma woodhouseii grisea Nelson, 1899
Sierra Madre Occidental, primarily in Chihuahua; intergrading with nevadae at NW of range.
Lighter and larger than woodhouseii, with a hint of a blue collar. Undertail coverts white. Long wings and fairly short, heavy bill.
  • Aphelocoma woodhouseii cyanotis Ridgway, 1887Blue-eared scrub jay
Lower Sierra Madre Oriental, Mexico, from S Coahuila to Tlaxcala; generally separated from texana woodhouseii; range adjacent to grisea in S Chihuahuan Desert. Apparently replaced by Mexican jay at higher-altitude woodland towards S of range.
Larger and duller than woodhouseii. Back brown with blue tinge, sometimes quite bluish. Supercilium faint and small. Underside quite light; lower belly white. Undertail coverts dull white. Bill and wings as in grisea, young birds browner than texana.

Sumichrast's scrub jay, Aphelocoma (woodhouseii) sumichrasti

  • Aphelocoma woodhouseii/sumichrasti sumichrasti (Baird and Ridgway, 1874)
    Sumichrast's scrub jay
From
Distrito Federal southeastwards through Veracruz, Puebla, and Oaxaca
.
Bright blue head color, with blackish ear patches. Faint white supercilium. Back grayish-brown, blue towards the tail. Light gray streaks on throat; traces of a faint grayish or grayish-blue breast collar. Thighs smoky gray. Remiges and rectrices dark dull blue. Large, with very long wings. Heavy, slightly hooked bill.
  • Aphelocoma woodhouseii/sumichrasti remota Griscom, 1934Chilpancingo scrub jay
SW Oaxaca and central
Rio Balsas
valley.
Duller and lighter than sumichrasti. Largest of all western scrub jays.

The common name of this subspecies commemorates the Mexican naturalist Francis Sumichrast.[13]

Footnotes

a Etymology: Aphelocoma, from Latinized Ancient Greek apheles- (from ἀφελής-) "simple" + Latin coma (from Greek kome κόμη) "hair", in reference to the lack of striped or banded feathers in this genus compared to other jays.

References

  1. . Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  2. ^
  3. ^ "Woodhouse's Scrub-Jay Similar Species to, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology".
  4. S2CID 11064341.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
  5. .
  6. ^
    PMID 17309867.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
  7. S2CID 21976318.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
  8. .
  9. .
  10. .
  11. .
  12. .
  13. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael (2003). Whose Bird? Men and Women Commemorated in the Common Names of Birds. London: Christopher Helm. p. 329.

Further reading

  • Madge, Steve; Burn, Hilary (1994): Crows and jays: a guide to the crows, jays and magpies of the world. A&C Black, London.

External links