Canada Jay - Sierra Club BC
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Canada Jay

CAN BE FOUND IN:

Canada Jay

Perisoreus canadensis 

Appearance

The Canada jay is slightly larger than a robin. It is gray above and white below with a black strip over the neck and the eye. Young jays are completely gray and start moulting in July; adults moult in May and June. 

Range & Habitat

They are found from east Alaska, across Canada, and into the northwest US. 

Reciprocal relationships

Canada jays are omnivores. They feed on the meat of small animals, fruit, insects, and seeds. They will frequent campsites with easy access to food. They use their saliva to stick food into balls that they hide in the forest. Canada jays are gifted with the art of communication. They have many different vocalizations to communicate with fellow birds, from cheeps and chucks to scolds and chatters. 

These birds mate for life and lay three to five green-grey eggs in nests built of twigs, bark, feathers, and fur. Falcons, hawks, and owls eat the jays, and small mammals eat the eggs and nestlings. 

Status

COSEWIC: Not Reported 
CDC: Yellow 

more information

If you belong to a First Nation with a story or piece of information not represented here and you would like to share more about this species, please email us at education@sierraclub.bc.ca.   

photo credit

Canva

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