A classic cinema moment: Gregory Peck, in his Academy Award鈥搘inning role as lawyer Atticus Finch in a Depression-worn Alabama town, kills a rabid dog stumbling down a dusty street. At supper that night, his children ask how old he was when he got his first gun.
鈥淭hirteen or fourteen,鈥 he answers. 鈥淚 remember when my daddy gave me that gun. He told me that I should never point it at anything in the house; and that he鈥檇 rather I鈥檇 shoot at tin cans in the backyard. But he said that sooner or later he supposed the temptation to go after birds would be too much, and that I could shoot all the blue jays I wanted鈥攊f I could hit 鈥檈m; but to remember it was a sin to kill a mockingbird.鈥
Mockingbirds, Peck-Finch explains, 鈥渄on鈥檛 eat people鈥檚 gardens. Don鈥檛 nest in the corncrib, they don鈥檛 do one thing but just sing their hearts out for us.鈥
鈥淚鈥檝e been there,鈥 said Curtis Adkisson, a retired Virginia Tech biology professor, when I read him this discourse from Hollywood鈥檚 adaptation of Harper Lee鈥檚 Pulitzer Prize鈥搘inning novel. Adkisson became a huge admirer of blue jays when, in 1980, he and his colleagues investigated the species鈥 role鈥攁n essential one, they discovered鈥攊n dispersing acorns and beechnuts from North American forests. 鈥淏ut when I was 10 or 11,鈥 he told me, 鈥淚 had a Benjamin pump-up pellet rifle, and my grandmother in Arkansas paid me a nickel for every blue jay I shot on her farm. I was on a mission, even shooting into nests in trees.鈥
These days you could get in a lot of trouble for plinking a blue jay, which, like all songbirds, is protected by the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Yet our most splendidly attired songbird is still widely loathed, even by some ardent bird lovers. Years ago, when as 爆料公社鈥檚 editor I commissioned an Arthur Singer painting showing a Cooper鈥檚 hawk plucking the feathers from a freshly killed jay, letter-writing readers cheered the raptor. And 鈥渂ully,鈥 鈥渢hief,鈥 and 鈥渕urderer鈥 are among the nicer names for blue jays you might hear in boutiques that cater to backyarders, selling feeders that supposedly fend off jays and other large birds like grackles (as well as squirrels). The idea, of course, is to save expensive seed offerings for favored chickadees, titmice, cardinals, and finches.
Blue jays, however, are fast learners. One Michigan winter, when I was a neophyte bird bander for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, I caught 44 different jays in our front yard in just a couple of weeks. None of them tripped my traps, baited with sunflower seeds, a second time. As for jay- and squirrel-proof bird feeders, it usually doesn鈥檛 take long for either bird or arboreal rodent to conquer these gadgets, albeit with considerable contortion. (One feeder that really does work is the Yankee Whipper鈥攄esigned by the Droll folks up in Connecticut)鈥攚ith its collapsing, weight-sensitive perches. Boing goes the jay or fluffy-tail.)
But I love blue jays. In fall and winter, I wear a baseball cap with a Toronto Blue Jays logo to celebrate the azure-garbed visitors at my feeding station, which I liberally sprinkle with cracked corn for their special delight. Of course, seldom a week goes by without someone asking why a New Yorker roots for a Canadian team instead of the Yankees or Mets. My alternate cap has a Baltimore Orioles logo. That鈥檚 my favorite spring and summer bird. Same question. 鈥淎re you an Orioles fan?鈥 鈥淣o, I just like orioles.鈥 Heads are shaken in puzzlement. (Truth is, I鈥檝e been following the Chicago Cubs since they last made it into the World Series, in 1945. Needless to say, they lost.)
Looking far back, I blame the patron saint of birdwatchers, John James 爆料公社, for the blue jay鈥檚 image problem. 鈥淲ho could imagine,鈥 the great artist effused in his Ornithological Biography, 鈥渢hat selfishness, duplicity, and malice should form the moral accompaniments of so much physical perfection!鈥 His stunning plate of three glorious specimens sucking eggs 鈥減ilfered from the nest of some innocent dove or harmless partridge鈥 was widely reproduced on calendars handed out by insurance companies in the mid-20th century, helping to foment blue jay hatred. (I had that page framed.) The blue jay has even been compared to the character Hotspur from Shakespeare鈥檚 Henry IV, Part 1. 鈥淗e gives us the impression of being independent, lawless, haughty, even impudent,鈥 the prominent ornithologist Winsor Marrett Tyler wrote in a 1940s essay about the species.
Yes, small birds may scatter to the four winds when a flamboyant blue jay with its erect crest, broad wings, and fanned tail swoops in, shouting Jay! Jay! Jay! They quickly get over it. With a big snowstorm looming early last spring, a host of anxious jays, cardinals, juncos, downy woodpeckers, tree sparrows, white-throated sparrows, and newly arrived song sparrows foraged in total harmony on seeds tossed or spilled beneath my hanging feeders.
And yes, blue jays on occasion do plunder other birds鈥 nests. A memorable photograph I featured in 爆料公社 captured a jay yanking nestlings from a Baltimore oriole鈥檚 hanging nursery. But an oft-cited study in the early 1900s found traces of eggs and young in only six of 530 blue jay stomachs, even though, as the researcher noted, 鈥渟pecial search was made for every possible trace of such material.鈥 Mainly, the omnivorous blue jays feast on insects, nuts, berries, seeds, and now and then small animals like deer mice, bats, lizards, and tree frogs.
In short, there is no valid reason to hold them in contempt. Instead, we should be celebrating the beauty of a bird that Henry David Thoreau, master of understatement, called 鈥渄elicately ornamented.鈥 (That blue plumage, it must be noted, is an optical illusion. Scientists remind us that blue pigment doesn鈥檛 occur in birds. The royal hue results from the scattering of light waves by tiny, prism-like melanin particles on the feather barbs.)
Indeed, as the story is told, a distinguished English bird man once visiting America was eager to see a living blue jay instead of a museum skin. He considered it to be the finest bird in the world and was surprised to find that it was quite ordinary.
While the blue jay is a year-round resident from southern Canada to the Gulf Coast and west to the far edge of the Great Plains, some of them migrate, though their numbers vary from year to year. For instance, as many as 154,000 southbound blue jays have been seen in one day from Hawk Tower at Holiday Beach Conservation Area on the north shore of Lake Erie. But as blue jay students Keith Tarvin and Glen Woolfenden note in their life history account for The Birds of North America project, 鈥淎ll aspects of blue jay migration [are] poorly understood.鈥
Thoreau also portrayed the blue jay鈥檚 characteristic cry as an 鈥渦nrelenting steel-cold scream.鈥 Experts call it the 鈥渏eer call,鈥 and it鈥檚 used for assembly and for mobbing predators (like my outdoor cats) and even human intruders. Or simply when a lonely jay wants contact with others of its kind. But blue jays have a remarkable vocal array, including what I consider one of the prettiest songs in the bird world. This is the 鈥渂ell call,鈥 a series of clear, fluid whistles: kloo-loo-loo. Then we have the 鈥渨hisper song,鈥 described by Tarvin and Woolfenden as a 鈥渟oft, quiet conglomeration of clicks, chucks, whirrs, whines, liquid notes, and elements of other calls.鈥 Fledglings, they note, develop a full vocal repertoire by the time they are six months old.
The blue jay is also a near-perfect mimic of the calls of red-tailed, red-shouldered, and Cooper鈥檚 hawks. The 鈥渉awk call鈥 is typically heard when a jay is in an excited state, perhaps approaching a feeding station. One unproven theory is that jays are trying to trick other birds into believing a raptor is present. (Another black mark: deceit.)
While blue jays are common in woody towns and suburbs, they are truly forest birds. All kinds of forests鈥攄eciduous, coniferous, mixed. In fact, their distant ancestors are credited for the rapid northward expansion of oak, beech, and chestnut trees once the glaciers retreated 10,000 years ago. Trees, of course, are rooted in place. But as Louis Pitelka of the University of Maryland鈥檚 Appalachian Laboratory wrote in American Scientist, 鈥淧opulations of plants do move, infiltrating new territory by creep of root and shower of seed.鈥 And paleoecologists mapping ancient pollen data tell us that nut-bearing trees advanced as much as 380 yards a year, much faster than trees with windblown seeds, like maples and birches.
Simply put, blue jays airlifted the oaks, beeches, and chestnuts to new territories when the ice melted. Nut-squirreling mammals, experts point out, were of little help, since they usually hoard food close to the parent tree.
Curt Adkisson became hooked on blue jays when Carter Johnson, a plant ecologist formerly at Virginia Tech, mentioned seeing jays streaming along a woody fencerow in Wisconsin, carrying beechnuts from a patch of forest to a bog. This led to a three-year study in which the scientists calculated that resident jays made 13,000 round trips from their woodlot habitat to the swamp鈥檚 vicinity over a 27-day period in September, dispersing 100,000 nuts to sites as far away as two and a half miles. The birds, they reported in American Midland Naturalist, carried anywhere from 3 to 14 beechnuts a trip. In our conversation, Adkisson, a private pilot, compared the sight of a heavily laden jay to a small plane laboring nose-high because of a weight and balance problem.
The fencerow route, the researchers noted, offered the slow-flying blue jays a place to hide from migrating hawks during the beechnut shuttle. And the birds were highly selective when collecting green nuts from burs in the tree canopy. They chose only sound, weevil-free seeds鈥攕eeds that were likely to germinate into beech seedlings if a particular bird died, forgot the location of its nut stash, or failed to empty the cache during a mild winter.
Meanwhile, back at Virginia Tech鈥檚 Blacksburg campus, biologist Susan Darley-Hill was monitoring blue jay acorn dispersal from a stand of 11 pin oaks surrounded by a mosaic of residential neighborhoods, vacant lots, mature woodlands, and old fields. Jays, she related in the journal Oecologia, carried off 133,000 acorns, or 54 percent of the mast crop, while eating another 20 percent on the scene. Most of the nuts left beneath the trees were parasitized by insect larvae and worthless.
The foraging blue jays, she explained, held an acorn with their feet and hammered the nut鈥檚 cap with a closed bill until it came loose. The birds then used their lower mandibles to pry the cap off and either hammered the acorn open and ate it or swallowed the nut whole for caching. The expandable throat and esophagus of a blue jay can hold up to five pin oak acorns or three larger ones from white oaks, and the bird typically collects one more nut in its bill before departing.
Arriving at its cache site, the blue jays usually regurgitated their acorn haul in a pile, then dropped the nuts one at a time within a few yards of each other, covering them with leaf litter. Darley-Hill reported that 91 percent of the caching sites in the Blacksburg study were on suburban tracts or bare soil where colonies of pin oak seedlings were already thriving. One cached acorn, she added, would never germinate. The jay stuffed it in ivy covering a brick wall.
In a nutshell, blue jays are the keystone species in restoring stands of oaks and other mast trees in today鈥檚 fragmented landscape, where forest patches are isolated by farms, suburban sprawl, and highway construction. If you consider that burnished-brown acorns are a major food item for 150 species of birds and mammals and make up at least a quarter of the diets of black bears, white-tailed deer, raccoons, gray and fox squirrels, wild turkeys, and white-footed mice, to name a few, how can one begrudge jays some bird seed?
Moreover, blue jays may be called upon for a greater task in the not-too-distant future. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency predicts that climate change will cause a northward shift of native forests that are adapted to cooler environments. In this scenario, New England鈥檚 maple syrup industry will become a memory as oaks and hickories replace today鈥檚 mix of maple, birch, and beech trees. (Native chestnuts, of course, are only a memory.) The latter species will displace northern coniferous forests as they, in turn, push out onto the tundra.
No one, of course, can be certain what the American landscape will look like in another century if global warming continues unabated, as seems likely. But I鈥檓 sure of one thing: Should it become necessary, the magnificent, misunderstood blue jay will be up to the task of moving North America鈥檚 nut trees north once again.