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Pinyon Jay

The Pinyon Jay (Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus) is a jay between the North American Blue Jay and the Eurasian Jay in size. It is the only member of the genus Gymnorhinus, (monotypic). Its overall proportions are very Nutcracker-like and indeed this can be seen as convergent evolution as both birds fill similar ecological niches. The pinyon jay is a bluish-grey coloured bird with deeper head colouring and whitish throat with black bill, legs and feet.

This species occurs in western North America from central Oregon to northern Baja California and east as far as western Oklahoma though it wanders further afield out of the breeding season. It lives in foothills where the pinyon pines Pinus edulis and Pinus monophylla occur.

This species is highly social, often forming very large flocks of 250 or more birds, and several birds always seem to act as sentries for the flock, watching out for predators while their companions are feeding. The seed of the Pinyon pine is the staple food but they supplement their diet with fruits and berries. Insects of many types are also eaten and sometimes caught with its feet.

The nest is always part of a colony but there is never more than one nest in a tree. Sometimes the colony can cover quite extensive areas with a single nest in each tree (usually juniper, live oak or pine). There are usually 3-4 eggs laid, quite early in the season. Incubation is usually 16 days. The male bird normally brings food near to the nest, and the female flies to him to receive it and take back to the nest to feed the chicks that fledge around 3 weeks later. Young are normally fed only by their parents, but once they reach near-fledging size they can sometimes receive a meal from any passing member of the colony, which can continue for some time after leaving the nest.

The Pinyon Jay was first collected, recorded and described as a species from a specimen shot along the Maria River in Northern Montana during the Prince Maximilian of Wied-Neuwied, Expedition to the Interior of North America in 1833.

The voice is described as a rhythmic krawk-kraw-krawk repeated two or three times.

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References

vd • Extant species of family Corvidae
Kingdom: Animalia • Phylum: Chordata • Class: Aves • Subclass: Neornithes • Superorder: Neognathae • Order: Passeriformes
Family Corvidae
Choughs
Pyrrhocorax Alpine Chough (P. graculus)Red-billed Chough (P. pyrrhocorax)
Treepies
Crypsirina Hooded Treepie (C. cucullata)Black Racket-tailed Treepie (C. temia)
Dendrocitta Andaman Treepie (D. bayleyi)Bornean Treepie (D. cinerascens)Grey Treepie (D. formosae)Black-faced Treepie (D. frontalis)White-bellied Treepie (D. leucogastra)Sunda Treepie (D. occipitalis)Rufous Treepie (D. vagabunda)
Platysmurus Black Magpie (P. leucopterus)
Temnurus Ratchet-tailed Treepie (T. temnurus)
Oriental magpies
Cissa Green Magpie (C. chinensis)Yellow-breasted Magpie (C. hypoleuca)Short-tailed Magpie (C. thalassina)
Urocissa Formosan Blue Magpie (U. caerulea)Red-billed Blue Magpie (U. erythrorhyncha)Yellow-billed Blue Magpie (U. flavirostris)Sri Lanka Blue Magpie (U. ornata)White-winged Magpie (U. whiteheadi)
Old World jays
Garrulus Eurasian Jay (G. glandarius)Lanceolated Jay (G. lanceolatus)Lidth's Jay (G. lidthi)
Podoces (Ground jays) Biddulph's Ground Jay (P. biddulphi)Henderson's Ground Jay (P. hendersoni)Pander's Ground Jay (P. panderi)Persian Ground Jay (P. pleskei)
Ptilostomus Piapiac (P. afer)
Stresemann's Bush Crow
Zavattariornis Stresemann's Bush Crow (Z. stresemanni)
Family Corvidae (Cont.)
Nutcrackers
Nucifraga Spotted Nutcracker (N. caryocatactes)Clark's Nutcracker (N. columbiana)
Holarctic magpies
Pica Black-billed Magpie (P. hudsonia)Yellow-billed Magpie (P. nuttalli)European Magpie (P. pica)Korean Magpie (P. sericea)
True crows (crows, ravens, jackdaws and rooks)
Corvus Australian and Melanesian species: Little Crow (C. bennetti)Australian Raven (C. coronoides)Bismarck Crow (C. insularis)Brown-headed Crow (C. fuscicapillus)Bougainville Crow (C. meeki)Little Raven (C. mellori)New Caledonian Crow (C. moneduloides)Torresian Crow (C. orru)Forest Raven (C. tasmanicus)Grey Crow (C. tristis)Long-billed Crow (C. validus)White-billed Crow (C. woodfordi) Pacific island species: ʻAlalā (C. hawaiiensis)Mariana Crow (C. kubaryi) Tropical Asian species: Daurian Jackdaw (C. dauuricus)Slender-billed Crow (C. enca)Flores Crow (C. florensis)Jungle Crow (C. macrorhynchos)House Crow (C. splendens)Collared Crow (C. torquatus)Piping Crow (C. typicus)Banggai Crow (C. unicolor) Eurasian and North African species: Mesopotamian Crow (C. capellanus)Hooded Crow (C. cornix)Carrion Crow (C. corone)Rook (C. frugilegus)Jackdaw (C. monedula ) • Eastern Carrion Crow (C. orientalis) • Fan-tailed Raven (C. rhipidurus)Brown-necked Raven (C. ruficollis) Holarctic species: Common Raven (C. corax) North and Central American species: American Crow (C. brachyrhynchos)Northwestern Crow (C. caurinus)Chihuahuan Raven (C. cryptoleucus)Tamaulipas Crow (C. imparatus)Jamaican Crow (C. jamaicensis)White-necked Crow (C. leucognaphalus)Cuban Crow (C. nasicus)Fish Crow (C. ossifragus)Palm Crow (C. palmarum)Sinaloan Crow (C. sinaloae) Tropical African species: White-necked Raven (C. albicollis)Pied Crow (C. albus)Cape Crow (C. capensis)Thick-billed Raven (C. crassirostris)Somali Crow (C. edithae)
Family Corvidae (Cont.)
Azure-winged Magpie
Cyanopica Azure-winged Magpie (C. cyana)
Grey jays
Perisoreus Gray Jay (P. canadensis)Siberian Jay (P. infaustus)Sichuan Jay (P. internigrans)
New World jays
Aphelocoma (Scrub jays) Western Scrub Jay (A. californica)Florida Scrub Jay (A. coerulescens)Island Scrub Jay (A. insularis)Mexican Jay (A. ultramarina)Unicolored Jay (A. unicolor)
Calocitta (Magpie-jays) Black-throated Magpie-jay (C. colliei)White-throated Magpie-jay (C. formosa)
Cyanocitta Blue Jay (C. cristata)Steller's Jay (C. stelleri)
Cyanocorax Black-chested Jay (C. affinis)Purplish-backed Jay (C. beecheii)Azure Jay (C. caeruleus)Cayenne Jay (C. cayanus)Plush-crested Jay (C. chrysops)Curl-crested Jay (C. cristatellus)Purplish Jay (C. cyanomelas)White-naped Jay (C. cyanopogon)Tufted Jay (C. dickeyi)Azure-naped Jay (C. heilprini)Bushy-crested Jay (C. melanocyaneus)Brown Jay (C. morio)White-tailed Jay (C. mystacalis)San Blas Jay (C. sanblasianus)Violaceous Jay (C. violaceus)Green Jay (C. ynca)Yucatan Jay (C. yucatanicus)
Cyanolyca Silvery-throated Jay (C. argentigula)Black-collared Jay (C. armillata)Azure-hooded Jay (C. cucullata)White-throated Jay (C. mirabilis)Dwarf Jay (C. nana)Beautiful Jay (C. pulchra)Black-throated Jay (C. pumilo)Turquoise Jay (C. turcosa)White-collared Jay (C. viridicyana)
Gymnorhinus Pinyon Jay (G. cyanocephalus)

Categories: IUCN Red List vulnerable species | Corvidae | Genera of birds | Monotypic bird genera | Native birds of the Western United States | Birds of the Great Basin desert region | Birds of the U.S. Rio Grande Valleys | Birds of Baja Peninsula Mexico

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