Clark’s Nutcracker
At a Glance
             This bird often lives in places remote from human contact, near treeline on windy western peaks. Where it does encounter people, however, it seems fearless, striding about in picnic grounds and scenic-view parking lots, looking for handouts. Nutcrackers are champions at burying pine seeds (sometimes tens of thousands) in hidden caches in fall, then re-finding them during winter; these seed stores allow them to nest in late winter, when the forest is still covered with snow. 
          
          
             All bird guide text and rangemaps adapted from  by Kenn Kaufman© 1996, used by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved. 
          
        
        Category      
      
        Crows, Magpies, Jays, Perching Birds
      
    
        IUCN Status      
      
        Least Concern
      
    
        Habitat      
      
        Arroyos and Canyons, Forests and Woodlands, High Mountains
      
    
        Region      
      
        California, Northwest, Plains, Rocky Mountains, Southwest, Texas, Western Canada
      
    
        Behavior      
      
        Direct Flight, Undulating
      
    
        Population      
      
        290.000
      
    Range & Identification
Migration & Range Maps
     Movements are complex and variable. Often a permanent resident, but may move to lower elevations in mountains in fall, even out into lowlands, perhaps in years when food crops are poor in the mountains. 
  
  
Description
     12-13" (30-33 cm). Large, mostly pale gray, with spike-pointed bill. Big white patches in black wings and tail very noticeable in flight. Gray Jay lacks white in wings and tail, has much smaller bill. 
  
  
        Size      
      
        About the size of a Crow, About the size of a Robin
      
    
        Color      
      
        Black, Gray, White
      
    
        Wing Shape      
      
        Fingered, Long, Rounded
      
    
        Tail Shape      
      
        Rounded, Square-tipped
      
    Songs and Calls
     A guttural kraaaa. 
  
  
        Call Pattern      
      
        Falling, Flat, Rising
      
    
        Call Type      
      
        Chirp/Chip, Rattle, Raucous, Scream
      
    Habitat
     High mountains, conifers near treeline. Generally breeds at high elevations in the mountains, in open or broken forest of pine, spruce, or Douglas-fir. May also breed in lower-elevation pine or pinyon-juniper woods when there is a good cone crop. Wanders to above treeline in summer, and may move to lower elevation woods in fall. 
  
  
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    Behavior
Eggs
     2-4, sometimes up to 6. Pale green, lightly spotted with brown and gray. Incubation is by both parents, about 16-18 days. Incubating adult sits tightly on nest even when closely approached. 
  
  
Young
     Both parents care for and feed young. Food for nestlings often consists of pine seeds stored the preceding autumn. Young leave the nest about 18-21 days after hatching. 
  
  
Feeding Behavior
     Forages on ground and in trees. Occasionally catches flying insects in the air, or digs insect larvae out of wood by pounding with bill. Will pry open pine cones to extract seeds. Harvests pine seeds in late summer and fall, carrying up to 90 at once in throat pouch to bury them in soil on exposed slopes; may store 30,000 or more seeds in one season. Has a remarkable ability to find these caches later, feeding on them through winter. 
  
  
Diet
     Omnivorous. Much of diet is pine seeds; remainder of diet quite varied, including other seeds, nuts, berries, insects, snails, eggs and young of other birds, carrion. 
  
  
Nesting
     Breeding activity often begins in late winter, when territory is still snow-covered. Courtship may involve long flights, male following female. Nest site is in coniferous tree, usually away from trunk on horizontal limb, 8-40' above the ground. Nest (built by both sexes) is large and deep; has a platform of twigs and bark fibers supporting a cup of grass, bark strips, pine needles. 
  
  
Conservation
Conservation Status
     Overall population trend not well known. As with other species living in mountaintop habitats, may be vulnerable to the effects of climate change. 
  
  
Climate Threats Facing the Clark's Nutcracker
    Choose a temperature scenario below to see which threats will affect this species as warming increases. The same climate change-driven threats that put birds at risk will affect other wildlife and people, too.
  
  
 
       
       
       
       
      