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Clark's nutcracker
Clark's nutcracker (Nucifraga columbiana), also known as Clark's crow, is a passerine bird in the family Corvidae, native to the mountains of western North America. The nutcracker is an omnivore, but subsists mainly on pine nuts, burying seeds in the ground in the summer and then retrieving them in the winter by memory. The bird was described by the Lewis and Clark Expedition, with William Clark first observing it in 1805 along the banks of the Salmon River, a tributary of the Columbia River.
In William Clark's initial description of the bird, he mistakenly described it as a woodpecker, writing "I saw today [a] bird of the woodpecker kind, which fed on pine burrs. Its bill and tail white; the wings black; every other part of a light brown, and about the size of a robin."
Clark's nutcracker's scientific name literally means "nutcracker of the Columbia". In 1806, Meriwether Lewis recorded a more detailed description from specimens collected along the Clearwater River in Idaho. A skin collected by the expedition was obtained by the ornithologist Alexander Wilson, who used it to produce an engraving for his American Ornithology work.
Originally placed in the genus Corvus by Wilson, by 1840 Clark's nutcracker was included in Nucifraga by John James Audubon. Through the second half of the 19th century, taxonomists placed Clark's nutcracker in its own genus, Picicorvus, as suggested by Charles Lucien Bonaparte. In 1894, ornithologist Robert Ridgway suggested its return to Nucifraga, citing morphological similarities to its modern Eurasian congenerics.
This species is present in western North America from British Columbia and western Alberta in the north to Baja California and central New Mexico in the south. There is also a small isolated population on the peak of Cerro Potosí, elevation 3,700 metres (12,200 ft), in Nuevo León, northeast Mexico. It is mainly found in mountains at altitudes of 900–3,900 metres (3,000–12,900 ft) in conifer forest. It is not typically migratory, but does seasonally move between higher elevations in the summer breeding season and lower elevations in the winter. Some populations of Clark's nutcracker will remain year-round at high elevations if they have sufficient food caches. In years where pine mast production is particularly poor, Clark's nutcracker may leave its normal range and travel as far north as Alaska, and east as the Great Plains. Vagrants have occurred as far east as Pennsylvania and Ontario.
Nucifraga columbiana is roughly the size of a jay, and slightly smaller than its Eurasian congenerics (northern, southern, and Kashmir nutcrackers). Its head, back, belly, and ventrum are covered in gray feathers, and it sports black wings with white tips on secondary feathers. Its tail feathers are easily distinguishable in flight, with central black feathers bordered by white feathers on either side. It has a long, black, pointed bill whose shape is specialized for removing the scales of pinecones.
The most important food resources for this species are the seeds of pines (Pinus sp.), principally two cold-climate (high-altitude) species of white pine with large seeds: the whitebark pine (P. albicaulis) and limber pine (P. flexilis). Seeds of other high-altitude pine species are also eaten, including the foxtail pine (P. balfouriana), bristlecone pine (P. longaeva) western white pine (P. monticola), and ponderosa pine (P. ponderosa). Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) is one of the few non-pine conifers whose seeds Clark's nutcracker regularly eats. During migrations to lower altitudes, it also extensively uses the seeds of pinyon pines. The isolated Cerro Potosí population is strongly associated with the local endemic Potosi pinyon (Pinus culminicola).[citation needed] All Clark's nutcrackers have a sublingual pouch capable of holding around 50–150 seeds, depending on the size of the seeds, which helps the birds more easily transport seeds between caches.
Clark's nutcrackers store seeds, usually in the ground for later consumption, in caches of 1–15 seeds (average of 3–4 seeds). They favor cache sites on steep, south-facing mountain slopes, as snow will melt here earliest in the year. Depending on the cone crop as well as the tree species, a single Clark's nutcracker can cache as many as 98,000 seeds per season. The birds regularly store more than they actually need as insurance against seed theft by other animals (squirrels, etc.), as well as low availability of alternative foods; this surplus seed is left in the cache, and may be able to germinate and grow into new trees. This storage behavior allows demonstration of the bird's long-term spatial memory; they are able to relocate caches of seeds with great accuracy up to nine months after initial storage. Clark's nutcrackers are heavily dependent on food retrieved from caches throughout the winter, and will dig up caches, even when buried under heavy snow. Short-term pictoral memory tasks reveal that while nutcrackers have particularly adept spatial memories, their visual memory is unremarkable; the cognitive ability they use to recover caches appears to be specifically evolved for this purpose.
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Clark's nutcracker
Clark's nutcracker (Nucifraga columbiana), also known as Clark's crow, is a passerine bird in the family Corvidae, native to the mountains of western North America. The nutcracker is an omnivore, but subsists mainly on pine nuts, burying seeds in the ground in the summer and then retrieving them in the winter by memory. The bird was described by the Lewis and Clark Expedition, with William Clark first observing it in 1805 along the banks of the Salmon River, a tributary of the Columbia River.
In William Clark's initial description of the bird, he mistakenly described it as a woodpecker, writing "I saw today [a] bird of the woodpecker kind, which fed on pine burrs. Its bill and tail white; the wings black; every other part of a light brown, and about the size of a robin."
Clark's nutcracker's scientific name literally means "nutcracker of the Columbia". In 1806, Meriwether Lewis recorded a more detailed description from specimens collected along the Clearwater River in Idaho. A skin collected by the expedition was obtained by the ornithologist Alexander Wilson, who used it to produce an engraving for his American Ornithology work.
Originally placed in the genus Corvus by Wilson, by 1840 Clark's nutcracker was included in Nucifraga by John James Audubon. Through the second half of the 19th century, taxonomists placed Clark's nutcracker in its own genus, Picicorvus, as suggested by Charles Lucien Bonaparte. In 1894, ornithologist Robert Ridgway suggested its return to Nucifraga, citing morphological similarities to its modern Eurasian congenerics.
This species is present in western North America from British Columbia and western Alberta in the north to Baja California and central New Mexico in the south. There is also a small isolated population on the peak of Cerro Potosí, elevation 3,700 metres (12,200 ft), in Nuevo León, northeast Mexico. It is mainly found in mountains at altitudes of 900–3,900 metres (3,000–12,900 ft) in conifer forest. It is not typically migratory, but does seasonally move between higher elevations in the summer breeding season and lower elevations in the winter. Some populations of Clark's nutcracker will remain year-round at high elevations if they have sufficient food caches. In years where pine mast production is particularly poor, Clark's nutcracker may leave its normal range and travel as far north as Alaska, and east as the Great Plains. Vagrants have occurred as far east as Pennsylvania and Ontario.
Nucifraga columbiana is roughly the size of a jay, and slightly smaller than its Eurasian congenerics (northern, southern, and Kashmir nutcrackers). Its head, back, belly, and ventrum are covered in gray feathers, and it sports black wings with white tips on secondary feathers. Its tail feathers are easily distinguishable in flight, with central black feathers bordered by white feathers on either side. It has a long, black, pointed bill whose shape is specialized for removing the scales of pinecones.
The most important food resources for this species are the seeds of pines (Pinus sp.), principally two cold-climate (high-altitude) species of white pine with large seeds: the whitebark pine (P. albicaulis) and limber pine (P. flexilis). Seeds of other high-altitude pine species are also eaten, including the foxtail pine (P. balfouriana), bristlecone pine (P. longaeva) western white pine (P. monticola), and ponderosa pine (P. ponderosa). Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) is one of the few non-pine conifers whose seeds Clark's nutcracker regularly eats. During migrations to lower altitudes, it also extensively uses the seeds of pinyon pines. The isolated Cerro Potosí population is strongly associated with the local endemic Potosi pinyon (Pinus culminicola).[citation needed] All Clark's nutcrackers have a sublingual pouch capable of holding around 50–150 seeds, depending on the size of the seeds, which helps the birds more easily transport seeds between caches.
Clark's nutcrackers store seeds, usually in the ground for later consumption, in caches of 1–15 seeds (average of 3–4 seeds). They favor cache sites on steep, south-facing mountain slopes, as snow will melt here earliest in the year. Depending on the cone crop as well as the tree species, a single Clark's nutcracker can cache as many as 98,000 seeds per season. The birds regularly store more than they actually need as insurance against seed theft by other animals (squirrels, etc.), as well as low availability of alternative foods; this surplus seed is left in the cache, and may be able to germinate and grow into new trees. This storage behavior allows demonstration of the bird's long-term spatial memory; they are able to relocate caches of seeds with great accuracy up to nine months after initial storage. Clark's nutcrackers are heavily dependent on food retrieved from caches throughout the winter, and will dig up caches, even when buried under heavy snow. Short-term pictoral memory tasks reveal that while nutcrackers have particularly adept spatial memories, their visual memory is unremarkable; the cognitive ability they use to recover caches appears to be specifically evolved for this purpose.