Posted on 09/30/2025 5:36:50 AM PDT by Red Badger
The rare hybrid offspring of a blue jay and a green jay is likely a result of weather-related shifts in the range of two species.
A rare hybrid bird identified in a suburb of San Antonio, Texas (center panel, credit: Brian Stokes) is the result of mating between a male blue jay (left, credit: Travis Maher/Cornell Lab of Ornithology/Macaulay Library) and a female green jay (right, credit: Dan O’Brien/Cornell Lab of Ornithology/Macaulay Library).
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Biologists at The University of Texas at Austin, who have reported discovering a bird that’s the natural result of a green jay and a blue jay’s mating, say it may be among the first examples of a hybrid animal that exists because of recent changing patterns in the climate. The two different parent species are separated by 7 million years of evolution, and their ranges didn’t overlap as recently as a few decades ago.
“We think it’s the first observed vertebrate that’s hybridized as a result of two species both expanding their ranges due, at least in part, to climate change,” said Brian Stokes, a graduate student in ecology, evolution and behavior at UT and first author of the study.
Stokes noted that past vertebrate hybrids have resulted from human activity, like the introduction of invasive species, or the recent expansion of one species’ range into another’s – think polar bears and grizzlies – but this case appears to have occurred when shifts in weather patterns spurred the expansion of both parent species.
In the 1950s, the ranges of green jays, a tropical bird found across Central America, extended just barely up from Mexico into south Texas and the range of blue jays, a temperate bird living all across the Eastern U.S., only extended about as far west as Houston. They almost never came into contact with each other. But since then, as green jays have pushed north and blue jays have pushed west, their ranges have converged around San Antonio.
Green Jay and Blue Jay occurrences in Texas reported from 2000 to 2023 in eBird, a popular app for birders and citizen scientists to share their observations. Green points represent green jay occurrences, blue points denote blue jay occurrences and black points indicate localities of recorded co-occurrence. Credit: Brian Stokes.
As a Ph.D. candidate studying green jays in Texas, Stokes was in the habit of monitoring several social media sites where birders share photos of their sightings. It was one of several ways he located birds to trap, take blood samples for genetic analysis and release unharmed back to the wild. One day, he saw a grainy photo of an odd-looking blue bird with a black mask and white chest posted by a woman in a suburb northeast of San Antonio. It was vaguely like a blue jay, but clearly different. The backyard birder invited Stokes to her house to see it firsthand.
“The first day, we tried to catch it, but it was really uncooperative,” Stokes said. “But the second day, we got lucky.”
The bird got tangled in a mist net, basically a long rectangular mesh of black nylon threads stretched between two poles that is easy for a flying bird to overlook as it’s soaring through the air, focused on some destination beyond. Stokes caught and released dozens of other birds, before his quarry finally blundered into his net on the second day.
Stokes took a quick blood sample of this strange bird, banded its leg to help relocate it in the future, and then let it go. Interestingly, the bird disappeared for a few years and then returned to the woman’s yard in June 2025. It’s not clear what was so special about her yard.
“I don’t know what it was, but it was kind of like random happenstance,” he said. “If it had gone two houses down, probably it would have never been reported anywhere.”
According to an analysis by Stokes and his faculty advisor, integrative biology professor Tim Keitt, published in the journal Ecology and Evolution, the bird is a male hybrid offspring of a green jay mother and a blue jay father. That makes it like another hybrid that researchers in the 1970s brought into being by crossing a green jay and a blue jay in captivity. That taxidermically preserved bird looks much like the one Stokes and Keitt describe and is in the collections of the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History.
“Hybridization is probably way more common in the natural world than researchers know about because there’s just so much inability to report these things happening,” Stokes said. “And it’s probably possible in a lot of species that we just don’t see because they’re physically separated from one another and so they don’t get the chance to try to mate.”
The scientists’ work was supported by a ConTex Collaborative Research Grant through UT System, the Texas EcoLab Program and Planet Texas 2050, a University of Texas at Austin grand challenge initiative.
The researchers did not opt to name the hybrid bird, but other naturally occurring hybrids have received nicknames like “grolar bear” for the polar bear-grizzly hybrid, “coywolf” for a creature that’s part coyote and part wolf and “narluga” for an animal with both narwhal and beluga whale parents.
To download high resolution images, visit: https://utexas.box.com/s/qt9irnnur7vk9c9qcwzyfrxmyxdgii3d
Blue Jays are real dicks.
Yes, they are. Don’t know about Green Jays, though..............
Just don’t let it go to public schools and read stories to children.
It can’t be a Grue unless it lurks in dark places and eats adventurers...
Climate change hoax still being pushed.
Blue jays are great parents. Every year, after their brood has left the nest, you see the parents with almost bald heads because they’ve lost their head feathers from feather mites in the nest. To me, that’s the sign of a loyal and faithful parent.
We have a flock that descend on peanuts when I throw them out. Always a joy to see.
They serve a purpose when a predator is spotted. All birds know the blue jay alarm call. Once the element of surprise is gone the snake, cat, hawk’s game is over.
I know. Can you believe such nonsense?
I would call it, “Any Port in a Storm.”
Jay Leno? Interesting timing of seeing this story, I am at my remote cabin which is a 31 mile boat ride to the nearest town. We have stellar jays here. Really friendly birds, had one get inside my cabin yesterday, never had that happen before! I released him on his own recognizance
Stellar Jay....Blue Jay with a Mohawk.............
Some birds like cardinals brighten our backyard by entering; others, by leaving—often chased by angry little wrens—like bluejays, the Adam Schiffs of the bird world, obnoxious [Expletives deleted]
Blue Jays are real dicks.
Still better than the Yankees.
They surely are the apex of avian A-holes.
They surely are the apex of avian A-holes.
The Blue Jays and the Yankees are in a battle.
I just love birds. Most of them anyway. I know buzzards are good for getting rid of road kill, but they are one ugly bird. Blue Jays are a very pretty bird, but ones with an attitude. When I walk into the nearby woods, they will immediately start screeching, and that warns other creatures also. At the feeder they are one of the first to arrive and gorge themselves, but they scatter a lot of the seed to the ground and that feeds the birds that like to eat at ground level like the doves. I’ve seen them drive off hawks that were too near their nest, kind of like Gutfeld taking on Tyrus.
Can they both lose?
Go Tigers!
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