Food-Focused and Fierce - Meet Canada jays and learn why they eat almost anything they can find
Birds & Blooms|October/November 2024
Even if you haven't heard of Canada jays, you've heard of their relatives. Members of the corvid family, they belong to the same group as American crows, blackbilled magpies, and jays including blue, Steller's and scrub. "Unlike many of the other jays, a Canada jay doesn't have a crest of any kind; it just has a rounded head," says Dale Gentry, director of conservation for Audubon Upper Mississippi River.In 2018, the Canada jay's name was changed from gray jay, but Dale thinks the former adjective was fitting. "Most of its body is shades of gray with some white," he says. "There are different subspecies that have different physical traits, but most of them have some lighter coloring on their foreheads, upper breasts and throats, each with a darker streak that starts at each eye and goes back."
By Emily Hannemann
Food-Focused and Fierce - Meet Canada jays and learn why they eat almost anything they can find

If you hear a scratchy, whistling call coming from the trees near your campsite, you might want to hide your crackers. Boisterous Canada jays have a well-earned reputation as food thieves, although there's more to them than their habit of stealing hikers' snacks.

Gray Jay No More

Even if you haven't heard of Canada jays, you've heard of their relatives. Members of the corvid family, they belong to the same group as American crows, blackbilled magpies, and jays including blue, Steller's and scrub. "Unlike many of the other jays, a Canada jay doesn't have a crest of any kind; it just has a rounded head," says Dale Gentry, director of conservation for Audubon Upper Mississippi River.

This story is from the October/November 2024 edition of Birds & Blooms.

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This story is from the October/November 2024 edition of Birds & Blooms.

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