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- Black-throated magpie-jay - Wikipedia
The black-throated magpie-jay (Cyanocorax colliei) is a strikingly long-tailed magpie-jay of northwestern Mexico The black-throated magpie-jay was formally described in 1829 by the Irish zoologist Nicholas Aylward Vigors from a specimen collected at San Blas, Nayarit, Mexico
- Mexican Jay Overview, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Mexican Jays are relatively common in the cool pine-oak-juniper woodlands of western Texas, southeastern Arizona, and a bit of far southwestern New Mexico, where they patrol their territories and forage throughout the day Strolling a road or trail for a few hours will often turn up a flock
- White-throated Magpie-Jay | Mexican Birds. org
The White-throated Magpie-Jay, Calocitta formosa formosa, is a one of three subspecies of White-throated Magpie-Jay, with all three being found in Mexico They are member of the Corvidae Family of Crows, Jays and Magpies, which has one hundred twenty-eight members placed in twenty-three genera, and of the two global species of the Calocitta Genus
- Black-throated Magpie-Jay - eBird
Spectacular, large, and very long-tailed jay of tropical lowland forest, plantations, and semiopen areas with hedges and tall trees; ranges from humid to fairly dry areas Range not known to overlap with smaller White-throated Magpie-Jay
- BLACK-THROATED MAGPIE JAYS - backyardnature. net
The mood of this strange and beautiful scene is suddenly shattered when three crow-size, long-crested, streamer-tailed, boldly blue, white, and black Black-throated Magpie Jays kite from the wall of my side of the canyon across the river to the other wall The stately passage of these large, elegant birds above the river of yellow butterflies
- Black-throated Magpie-Jay - Urraca Cara Negra (Calocitta . . .
White-throated Magpie-Jay Antonio Robles Published: May 09, 2022 Updated: Jul 02, 2024
- Mexican Jay | Audubon Field Guide
11 1 2 -13" (29-33 cm) Plain dull blue above, smooth gray below Juveniles in Arizona and New Mexico have pale bills at first, gradually becoming blackish More heavily built than Woodhouse's Scrub-Jay, and lacks contrasting white throat and dark necklace
- Mexican Jay Identification - All About Birds
Large songbird with long tail and heavy bill Adults are blue with a gray patch on the back and dingy gray underparts The intensity of blue varies across their range; birds in Arizona tend to be paler blue Lacks a crest, has an all-blue back, and no necklace across the chest Medium-sized crestless jay with dingy gray underparts
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