Skip to main content

Easy Food at Campgrounds Changes Jay Behavior

Stellar's Jay-Goldenberg
On campgrounds, Steller's Jay may chose human food, like this peanut, over eggs from other birds' nests. Photo by Will Goldenberg.

Editor’s note: The following research summary describes a new article in The Condor, the journal of the Cooper Ornithological Society, and was provided by the Central Ornithology Publication Office.

Related Stories

Anyone who’s gone camping has seen birds foraging for picnic crumbs, and according to new research in The Condor: Ornithological Applications, the availability of food in campgrounds significantly alters jays’ behavior and may even change how they interact with other bird species.

Steller’s Jays are intelligent, adaptable birds, and in California’s Redwood National and State Parks, the ready availability of food draws them to campgrounds. Tracking the behavior of jays living near campgrounds and comparing it with jays living in more natural areas of the same parks, Will Goldenberg of Humboldt State University and his colleagues found that having easy access to food made jays living near campgrounds less territorial. Campground jays spent less time foraging and more time near the ground than their counterparts without access to campgrounds.

A federally threatened seabird, the Marbled Murrelet, nests in the highest canopy old-growth redwood forest, and jays are known to eat murrelet eggs when they encounter their nests. Though jays living in campgrounds spent more time on the ground, 40 meters below where murrelets nest, Goldenberg and his colleagues still worry that the concentrated foraging activity of jays could put murrelets near campgrounds at risk. “The results of our study should give researchers and conservationists new tools to make informed decisions regarding corvid management,” according to Goldenberg.

They carried out the study in 2010 and 2011 by capturing and radio-tagging jays to follow their habits. “Working with Steller’s Jays in campgrounds really keeps you on your toes. Individual jays were quick to learn our trapping techniques and would avoid any traps that they had previously experienced,” says Goldenberg. “In addition, our study sites contained the tallest trees on the planet and more above ground biomass than any other forest, making our radio tracking efforts an extreme challenge.”

“This study by Goldenberg et al. breaks new ground by providing detailed observations of Steller’s Jay behavior in and out of campgrounds,” according to John Marzluff of the University of Washington, an expert on corvid behavior. “Though Steller’s Jays still pose a serious threat to sensitive species that nest well above ground, such as the Marbled Murrelet, their use of anthropogenic foods that occur most frequently at ground level in camps may reduce chance encounters between jays and murrelets within the camp proper.”

About the journal: The Condor: Ornithological Applications is a peer-reviewed, international journal of ornithology. It began in 1899 as the journal of the Cooper Ornithological Club, a group of ornithologists in California that became the Cooper Ornithological Society.

The Cornell Lab

All About Birds
is a free resource

Available for everyone,
funded by donors like you

American Kestrel by Blair Dudeck / Macaulay Library