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Island Scrub-Jay

An Island of Their Own

By Luke Caldwell and Scott Sillett
Published: September 2008

blue bird with long tail and white chest As soon as they step off the boat onto Santa Cruz Island, the largest of the eight California Channel Islands, a distinctive, metallic call greets visitors. This call belongs the island scrub-jay, a large, strikingly blue bird with a whitish-gray breast and a prominent black bill.

One can usually spot these inquisitive jays perched upon a large shrub, gazing imperiously over their territories. But these lordly birds reign over a small kingdom: the island scrub-jay lives only on Santa Cruz Island, which means it has the smallest range of any North American bird species.

Island scrub-jays belong to the taxonomic family Corvidae, which includes crows, ravens, magpies, and jays. Corvids are remarkable for their intelligence, memory, and curiosity. The scrub-jay group consists of 5 species that range from Central America to Washington state and from the Pacific Ocean to Florida. Their genus name, Aphelocoma, means "soft hair" and refers to scrub-jays' sleek appearance, compared to other corvids.

Genetic analyses indicate that the island scrub-jay diverged from its closest relative, the widespread western scrub-jay (A. californica), about 150,000 years ago. How did scrub-jays get to the Channel Islands? These islands were never connected to mainland California, and scrub-jays do not readily cross large bodies of water.

This hesitation to fly over open water is evident in the lack of scrub-jays on the other Channel Islands, including Santa Rosa, which has seemingly suitable habitat and is only 5 miles (8 kilometers) from Santa Cruz Island.

Map showing mainland California and some of the Channel Islands. Santa Cruz Island is directly south of Santa Barbara and Santa Rosa Island is to its west.

During the Pleistocene, sea level was lower and Santa Cruz, Anacapa, Santa Rosa, and San Miguel Islands merged to form one large island called Santarosae that was 2 to 5 miles (3 to 8 kilometers) from the mainland at its closet point. Scrub-jays probably crossed the narrower Santa Barbara Channel in the Pleistocene and lived on much of Santarosae.

As sea level rose to its present level, gene flow between island and mainland scrub-jays ceased and the northern islands became separated again. We don’t know when island scrub-jays became restricted to Santa Cruz. Scientists have found a subfossil bone of the island scrub-jay on Santa Rosa Island, indicating that it lived there thousands of years ago.

However, scientists did not describe this species until 1886, after human activity and tens of thousands of introduced sheep degraded vegetation on Santa Rosa. Thus, scrub-jays could have disappeared from Santa Rosa Island just in the past few centuries.

Even though island scrub-jays look superficially like their mainland relatives, they have a few readily apparent differences: they are brighter blue, larger, and have a proportionally burlier bill that allows them to be one of the top terrestrial predators on Santa Cruz. In fact, they eat just about anything, including insects, spiders, snakes, lizards, mice, and other birds’ eggs and nestlings. We’ve even observed them attempting to catch adult orange-crowned warblers (Oreothlypis celata sordida)!

Bright blue bird with long, stout black bill Bright blue bird with stout black bill

Comparison of island (left) and western (right) scrub-jays, note the bigger bill of the island scrub-jay.

Island scrub-jays, like other Aphelocoma, also have a great fondness for acorns, which they need to survive over winter when animal prey is scarce. In the fall, Santa Cruz’s oaks produce copious quantities of acorns. Island scrub-jays collect acorns greedily, sometimes stuffing their throats so full that the acorns bulge from their mouths.

They then fly off and use their big bill to bury, or cache, the acorns in hidden spots to eat later, sometimes months later. Scientists think caching is one reason why scrub-jays and other corvids are among the most intelligent of birds: they need a big brain to remember where to find the thousands of acorns they hid earlier.

Island scrub-jays are monogamous and may stay with a mate for their entire lives. Each pair vigorously defends its territory of a few hectares in size and rarely leaves it. Unlike some Aphelocoma species, the island scrub-jay is not a cooperative breeder, meaning that pairs do not rely on other related jays to help them raise their young.

pair of blue birds in tree overlooking island

Both the male and the female help build nests three to 25 feet high in trees and shrubs. They use small oak branches that they break off trees (and they never use sticks that fall to the ground). These branches form the cup of the nest, which the parents line with grass and small roots.

four blue eggs in a nest Females lay 3 to 5 eggs in a nest that they incubate for about 20 days. While the female sits on the eggs, the male spends his time hunting and defending the nest from snakes, hawks, foxes, and other island scrub-jays. The male is also responsible for bringing the female food so she can be with the eggs as long as possible each day. Our observations suggest that the more time parents spend near their nest, the higher their chances of defending against nest predators.

Short (< 1 minute) video clips showing island scrub-jay nests being depredated:

After the eggs hatch, both parents spend 23 days feeding, defending, and caring for their nestlings. This is a long nestling period, and our ongoing research indicates that only about one-third of island scrub-jay nests are successful in fledging young. However, if a jay can make it through the gauntlet of predators to live into their second year, it can live for more than 20 years!

We still have much to learn about the ecology and management of the island scrub-jay. This jay’s tiny range and resulting small population size make it especially vulnerable to natural disasters such as a catastrophic fire, to disease such as West Nile Virus, and to habitat alteration due to climate change. Fortunately, the Channel Islands National Park and The Nature Conservancy jointly protect Santa Cruz Island. Check the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center’s website for regular updates about our research on this fascinating bird.

Research Partners:

  • Colorado State University
  • The Nature Conservancy
  • U.S. National Park Service
  • Wildlife Health Center, University of California – Davis

Comments (17):

  1. EXCELLENT

    8/29/2008

  2. Any article that informs me, I consider a good article. Tony Freer Victoria Harbour. Ontario L0K 2A0

    9/2/2008

  3. its so cool

    9/4/2008

  4. quite great & informative for children like me who love reading &its also helpful for guides

    9/10/2008

  5. very good

    9/10/2008

  6. this is very interesting....

    9/12/2008

  7. this artilcle didnt give me good info . iam dissapoitned:(

    4/20/2009

  8. tell me more i`ve got blue little eggs in my garden and i`m looking to know what they are

    5/30/2009

  9. Very interesting article. A California Scrub Blue Jay visits my garden everyday. The bird eats crackers and hides some in the bushes! This bird also sings! 6/10/09

    6/10/2009

  10. Luke rocks!!

    8/13/2009

  11. I thought the article was terrific. It surprised me to learn there are fresh water springs on the island.

    5/1/2010

  12. I live in Ventura in the hills about 5 miles from the beach. There is a nest and 3-4 baby birds. One bird fell out and the parent bird has been feeding it. At first we thought they were bluejays but when we researched the pictures online, we realized they weren't. In fact, the most resemble the Island Scrub-Jay. On most days, you can see the islands from our house. Santa Cruz Island is about 20 miles from Ventura. Is it possible that the bird flew all the way across and then had its babies here? We just noticed them a few days ago...

    6/20/2010

  13. Very helpful. I thought I had Island Scrub Jays in my backyard, but the beak comparison shows me I have the less rare Western Scrub Jays.

    10/17/2010

  14. I live in Long Beach and we have one of these in our back yard. I was interested in the bird because of it reminded me of the Eastern Blue Jay. After looking at the pictures I can see easily that we have an Island Scrub Jay for sure. He's been eating the peanuts we leave out for the squirrels and will bury the left over nuts in the back yard. Long blackish bill and if we leave out sunflower seads he will crack them open by pounding it against a tree branch.

    1/24/2011

  15. Good article. Could it be that I have just seen one of these in my back garden in San Francisco? It had exactly the same markings as those in the pictures above and the longer dark bill. I shall try to get a picture of it next time I see it.

    4/10/2011

  16. Yesterday, October 31, 2011, during the late morning, two of these birds landed on a little table I have right next to my door, which I had cracked open at the time. They were so close I could reach out to touch either one of them, but I froze as soon as I saw the color blue because I have NEVER seen a blue colored bird, especially so close to me! Anyhow, aside from the color blue, a 2nd physical attribute stood out significantly to me and that was the fact that one of the two blue birds had black feathers as well AND a longer, thinner, pointier bill thAn the other-- I assumed they were mates and the more aggressive looking one was the male, but since I've been looking around for information upon seeing those birds, I do believe one was a Mountain bluebird and I am absolutely positive the second bird was the Island Scrub-Jay; however, the only thing that throws me for a loop is how this website says this particular bird is pretty much confined to the islands off of Santa Cruz, but I am quite a wAys away from Santa Cruz, I am in the city of West Covina, CA, which is a Los Angeles County suburb... Ive been wondering if there's some sort of bird trainer around my area because I these amazingly bright, very chatty, high flying parrots regularly come to a tree in my front yard to snap open seed pods and eat the little seeds from inside. Now, after about 1.6 months of living in this locale, I'm seeing righteously blue birds for the first time... Is it possible for the Island Scrub-Jay's to make their way to West Covina? This area has a LOT of the habitat I've read these birds love and we also have an abundance of creatures that the Island Scrub-Jay's like to eat. Thanks for your time! Kristen in West Covina, CA

    11/1/2011

  17. I hate to break it to the people above but this bird is found only on Santa Cruz Island (it is endemic to the island meaning it is the only place it exists). All of you who have seen a bird like this in your backyard...it is a Western Scrub Jay you saw, not an Island Scrub Jay. Close!

    11/20/2011