A flock of Pinyon Jays arrive in a flash of blue, and leave again just as suddenly. This once mysterious bird is now the subject of over 20 years of intensive research involving over one thousand colour-marked jays by Russell Balda, John Marzluff and their colleagues and helpers. This plain blue bird has turned out to be anything but plain in its biology and behaviour. Uniquely dependent on the seeds of the Pinyon Pine for food, they have developed a number of behavioural and morphological adaptations to best utilise this resource, above all caching enough seeds each autumn to supply their needs throughout the winter and fuel their unusual habit of nesting in late winter. Fluctuations in pine-seed supply, both by season and between years, poses special problems for these birds and has led to their extremely flexible and complex social system in which learning and memory play an unusually large part. They store pine seeds and retrieve them with uncanny accuracy; they form lifelong pair bonds and nest colonially, occasionally involving younger birds to help established pairs rear the young; and they use their large vocabulary to coordinate activities within one of the largest known avian societies. This intriguing story will fascinate both the enthusiastic amateur birder and the professional alike. Packed with information, it presents Pinyon Jay biology in a readable form and places them into the wider context of studies on bird ecology and evolution. Fine illustrations by Tony Angell, with additional pictures by Caroline Bauder, complete this attractive addition to any birder's bookshelf.



Autorentext

John Marzluff is a research scientist with Greenfalk Consultants in Boise, Idaho and adjunct assistant professor of biology at Boise State University. His interest in behavioral ecology was developed by High School mentors in eastern Kansas. He obtained an under- graduate degree in wildlife biology at the University of Montana and completed his graduate work on the behaviour of Pinyon Jays at Northern Arizona University in 1987. He and his wife spent the next three years living in a one-room cabin in the Maine woods investigating the social ecology of Common Raven. He is currently studying ravens in Idaho as well as assessing the impacts of human disturbance on birds of prey. When he is not chasing birds, he and his wife can be found mushing his team of Siberian Husky sled dogs.



Inhalt

List of Photographs
List of Figures
List of Tables
Preface
Introduction


1 A Bird Addicted to Seeds
2 Birds of What Feather?
3 A Co-evolutionary Tale
4 Vocal Communication
5 Flock Composition
6 Dominance Relationships within the Flock
7 The Dating Game
8 When and Where to Nest
9 Parental Jays
10 Lifetime Reproductive Success
11 Travels and Tribulations of Young Jays
12 A Matter of Life and Death
13 Conclusions: Sociality in a Variable Environment

Appendices
Bibliography

Titel
The Pinyon Jay
Untertitel
Behavioral Ecology of a Colonial and Cooperative Corvid
EAN
9781408136928
ISBN
978-1-4081-3692-8
Format
E-Book (epub)
Herausgeber
Veröffentlichung
30.10.2010
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
8.11 MB
Anzahl Seiten
317
Jahr
2010
Untertitel
Englisch