THE BIRDS
INTERIOR CALIFORNIA JAY. Aphelocoma californica immanis
Grinnell
Field characters.Body
size about that of Robin but tail longer (as long as body), broader, and
rounded at end. No crest on head. Top of head, neck, wings, and tail,
blue; back grayish brown; under surface of body grayish white, except
for incomplete collar of blue low on breast. Voice: A variety of
mildly harsh notes: kwish, cheek, chu'-ick, schwee-ick, kschu-ee;
young out of nest utter a "teasing scold."
Occurrence.Abundant
resident of Upper Sonoran Zone on west side of Sierra Nevada. Ranges
locally down into Lower Sonoran Zone (as at Snelling) and up into
Transition Zone (as at Dudley). Reported in Yosemite Valley (near Lost
Arrow Camp), September 25, 1917 (Mailliard, 1918, p. 18), and on several
dates in 1920 between July 26 and September 11 (C. W. Michael, MS).
Frequents blue and live oaks, digger pines, and chaparral. Non-flocking,
but socially inclined.
The Interior California Jay is a characteristic
inhabitant of the oak, digger pine, and chaparral growths which clothe
the slopes of the foothills flanking the west base of the Sierra Nevada.
Only locally does it invade the Great Central Valley below and to the
west, or the pine covered slopes of higher elevation immediately to the
east. Beyond the Sierras, in the vicinity of Mono Lake, its niche is
taken by a closely similar species, the Woodhouse Jay. Within most of
its range as thus circumscribed it is the only bird of its family and is
abundant there at all times of the year.
Whoever chances to invade the domain of the Interior
California Jay will speedily make the acquaintance of the bird, for it
is quick to sense the arrival of a newcomer within its range and it
promptly makes an investigation of the traveler's business. The large
size of the bird and the clear blue of the head, wings, and tail readily
identify it as a blue jay, while the grayish white color of the under
surface mark it as different from the Piñon Jay which may sometimes
visit the western foothills. This gray under surface, the paler blue of
the upper parts, and the absence of any sort of crest, all combine to
make the California Jay easily distinguishable from the Blue-fronted
Jay.
The normal habitat of this species is the foothill
oak belt; in the oak trees the jays find everything necessary for their
existence, food, shelter for their nests, and retreats for themselves
and young. They are found also, however, to some extent in other kinds
of trees, and also locally in tracts of pure chaparral. Finding such
complete satisfaction of all its life requirements within one relatively
narrow zone, it is not surprising that the California Jay is a permanent
resident. It does not participate, at least to any appreciable extent,
in the late summer, up-mountain, food-seeking migration undertaken by so
many foothill birds, the bush-tits, the wren-tits, etc., species which
are also ordinarily classed as residents. On a few occasions individuals
have been found in Yosemite Valley, though our own party did not happen
to see any there. On September 25, 1917, Mr. Joseph Mailliard (1918, p.
18) noted a bird near Lost Arrow Camp. In 1920 Mr. C. W. Michael (MS)
noted the species on July 26 and 29, and on several dates in August and
September until the 11th of the latter month, ten of the birds being
seen on August 27.
The Interior California Jay is notoriously bold and
forward in its behavior; although it is counted as a non-flocking
species, individuals and pairs will gather quickly in response to the
excited calls of one of their kin. The birds seem never to be so busy
with their own affairs that they cannot stop and investigate any object
of an unusual nature. Ordinarily this jay is the picture of
animation. Perched, it stands in an attitude of alertness, its head up,
tail straight back or tilted slightly upward, and feet slightly spread.
Just after alighting a jay will often execute a deep bow involving the
entire body, and this may be repeated a number of times and in different
directions. The purpose of this bowing is not clear to us. Leaving a
perch in the top of one tree the bird will often fly to another of equal
elevation, keeping on a direct and nearly level course high in the air
during its passage between the two vantage points. Its flight is
characteristic, a few strokes of the short rounded wings, then a sail,
while from time to time the tail is spread so that its rounded end and
kite-shaped outline show well. Descending from the top of a tree to the
ground a jay will sometimes drop at a steep angle, with wings and tail
closed, only opening them momentarily to check or guide its passage.
If interest lags the jay will seek a perch at the top
of an oak or digger pine, and sit there silent and motionless for
minutes at a time, with its tail hanging like a dead weight, vertically
downward. But the bird evidently watches all that goes on in the
vicinity, for it frequently comes out of one of these reveries with a
sudden burst of voice and movement.
When going down to water to drink the behavior of the
California Jay is in marked contrast to that of most birds. The jays
waste no time in looking about for possible enemies; they probably fear
none. The two birds of a pair watched near Coulterville came down to the
stream one after the other and each drank three or four times, tipping
the head back with each swallow.
The voice of the California Jay, although
considerably varied, is easily recognized and remembered after once
learned, but we find it difficult to describe intelligibly. To one of
the present authors (Grinnell) some of the more common notes seem
possible of representation as follows: cheek, cheek, cheek, etc.,
staccato, 3 to 10 times in rapid succession; chu'-ick, chu'-ick,
chu'-ick, etc., usually in 3's, slowly; schwee-ick,
higher-pitched, 2 to 6 times, uttered still more slowly. To the other
author (Storer) the following transcriptions seem to represent the notes
most often heard: (1) A series of mildly harsh notes, kwish, kwish,
kwish, uttered usually 3 to 5 times in quick succession; (2) a more
protracted softer note, kschu-ee, or jai-e, usually given
singly. Birds of a pair when foraging together, and young and adults
when in family parties, utter a subdued guttural krr'r'r'r'r.
When attending young still in the nest, the parent birds utter a low
crooning, impossible of representation in syllables; and the young
birds, after leaving the nest and before gaining their living
independently, have a "teasing scold" which they utter almost
incessantly, in keeping their parents apprised of their need for food.
Most or all of the above notes are uttered with various modifications,
perhaps to indicate different shades of meaning. As is true of some
other members of its family the California Jay employs a 'language'
which it probably finds of considerable usefulness.
With the coming of early spring, the instincts which
accompany the nesting season are revived and the jays commence the
construction of their nests. Building, in some instances, probably
begins in April, as by early May nests with eggs or young are common.
Young birds, out of the nests, were seen in the third week of May, 1915;
while at the same time a pair of adults was seen constructing a nest.
All broods are not brought off at the same time. Our findings may be
given in some detail here to present a more complete record of the
nesting of the California Jay in the Yosemite region.
A nest with 4 nearly fresh eggs was found near
Lagrange on May 8 (1919). On May 10, that year, a nest with one young
bird and the other eggs on the point of hatching was seen near
Coulterville. On May 21 (1915) a nest was found under construction near
Pleasant Valley, and on May 23 young were heard, out of the nest, near
the same place; while on May 30 an adult with 3 young scarcely able to
fly was seen there, and on June 3, a family party of 4 of these jays was
seen near the McCarthy ranch, 3 miles east of Coulterville. The young
birds remain with their parents for a long time, even into August, and
so have a long period of dependence or semi-dependence. After that the
individuals or pairs scatter out everywhere through the oak covered
regions.
The nest mentioned above as found near Lagrange on
May 8, 1919, was in a blue oak on the crown of a rounded hill
overlooking the Tuolumne River. The rim of the nest was by actual
measurement 4780 millimeters (about 16 feet) from the ground, and was at
the side of a horizontal branch 80 millimeters in diameter where some
small twigs formed a 5-sided frame into which the nest was set. The
foundation work of the nest was about 200 millimeters across, and
consisted of crooked dry blue oak twigs. There were large interstices in
the weaving. Inside of this was an intermediate layer of dry fine yellow
grass stems and rootlets. And within this was a thin lining of black
horsehair forming an inner cup. The latter was 100 millimeters in
diameter at the top and 50 millimeters deep at the center. The
four eggs lay on this inner lining. One of the parent jays had been
sitting on the nest, which was readily visible from anywhere within a
50-foot radius of the tree; but the bird flushed at our approach and did
not again come within a hundred yards of the site while we were there,
although both members of the pair called from a distance several
times.
Soon after arriving at Blacks Creek, west of
Coulterville, in 1919, we discovered a California Jay's nest in the
crotch of a willow which leaned over the creek directly opposite where
we had made our camp, and not over 30 feet from the tent door. During
the succeeding days we had many opportunities to observe the behavior of
the parent birds. When one of us climbed to the nest on May 10, it was
found to contain one newly hatched youngster and 3 eggs ready to hatch.
The sitting bird had remained until closely approached. It then flushed
quietly and returned as soon as the observer quitted the tree. The mate
was seen only momentarily on this occasion. The remaining eggs evidently
hatched on that day or the next, as the adults had by that time begun to
busy themselves in obtaining food and bringing it to the nest.
The parent birds had a particular route in
approaching and leaving the nest, and this route was adhered to
strictly. They would always approach through the trees of a wooded slope
to the east, and then, having reached the nest tree, hop by easy stages
to a position on the west side of the nest. From there the nestlings
would be fed, and then the nest cleaned. After that the bird would work
out of the south side of the willow, fly to a digger pine across the
creek immediately above our tent, hop upward until near the top of the
pine, and from there would take off in a direct course to its next
forage ground. Even when the jays had been hunting insects in the open
area immediately west of our camp, they would circle about when ready to
return to the nest and approach it from the east. Only one adult visited
the nest at a time although they often followed one another in quick
succession. Save for the low crooning given when standing over the
young, no calls were uttered while the parents were in the vicinity of
the nest. There was a 'zone of quiet' about their home, within
which the owners would not call or raise any alarm.
The California Jay shares with others of its tribe
the reputation of a plunderer of the nests of other birds. Both eggs and
young are taken in season, but usually the jays' persecution of the
smaller species ends by late summer. Mr. Donald D. McLean has told us,
however, that on one occasion in midwinter he saw a California Jay kill
a Sierra Junco. While near Coulterville we heard and saw several
demonstrations by suspicious small birds caused by the presence of jays
near the small birds' nests. One jay seen hopping about in some hillside
brush caused consternation among some wren-tits and gnatcatchers which
evidently had nesting interests there. On another occasion a California
Jay was seen to enter a small blue oak and by a few vigorous hops ascend
to the top of the tree where it perched in silence. Upon its arrival, a
pair of Western Gnat-catchers which had been in the same tree left off
their foraging, and the male of the pair began to swing in vertical
pendulum-like arcs over the jay's head, coming within 6 inches at each
swoop and rising 2 or 3 feet on either side. No note was uttered by
either bird. The performance evidently discomfited the jay to some
extent, for it soon began to move. For a while the gnatcatcher followed,
continuing his swinging course. The jay's passage from tree to tree was
marked for some distance by the movements of its demonstrative
satellite. Eventually the jay made off in rapid course and left its
small tormentor behind. On another occasion a California Jay seen on the
ground in search of insects was the center of a similar but shorter
demonstration by a Western Kingbird.
The California Jay is surprisingly adaptable as
regards its food habits and yet it depends very largely upon a certain
few items. In the nesting season various insects are gathered in
quantity, together with such eggs and young of the smaller birds as
opportunity offers. But the staple diet of the species, during the
interval between the close of one nesting season and the beginning of
the next, is derived from its favorite tree, the oak. At El Portal in
the fall months California Jays were seen on several occasions carrying
acorns in their bills. At times they would obtain the nuts from
the golden oaks on the south side of the river cañon, and then
fly across the river, high overhead, each bird carrying one acorn
lengthwise in its bill. They flew eventually to the dry brush-covered
slopes which clothe the north wall of the cañon, and there, as
was seen in several instances, the acorns were buried, singly, in the
ground. With vigorous blows of the stout bill a jay would quickly
excavate a steep-sided pit into which he would thrust the nut, cover it
over, and tamp the ground. Sometimes leaves would be whisked over the
spot, with evident intent to render the place indistinguishable from the
surrounding surface of the ground. There is no doubt that the jays
themselves fail to recover many of these caches, and thus unconsciously,
as planters of seeds, serve the interests of the trees.
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