Unraveling the Plight of the Pinyon Jay

A nasal, laughing bird call echoed through the Ortiz Mountains in northern New Mexico this September. A couple of pinyon jays chattered loudly as they flew over the piรฑon pine and juniper woodlands that sweep across the foothills. โ€œThey have really fun calls,โ€ said Peggy Darr, then the resource management specialist with Santa Fe County’s Open Space, Trails, and Parks Program. โ€œThey’re a very hard bird not to love.โ€

The jays forage for piรฑon nuts in the dense habitat on the ridgetop in fall and winter, then cache them in more open areas near the road, she said. Caching is critical for the jaysโ€™ survival, but also for the trees. Pinyon jays and piรฑon pines are wholly interdependent โ€” the piรฑon nuts provide essential sustenance for the bird, and the jay offers critical seed dispersal for the tree. The pinyon jay is a keystone species of these arid forests of diverse piรฑon pines and junipers, extending over 150,000 square miles across 13 Western states.

The “blue crows,โ€ as the jays were once known, are year-round residents of 11 Western states, but New Mexico hosts the largest share, about one-third of their population.

Together, jays and piรฑon pines help create vital habitat for numerous plants and animals, including threatened bird species like Woodhouseโ€™s scrub jay and the gray vireo. The pines also supply a traditional food source for Indigenous tribes and Hispanic communities in New Mexico.

These dusky blue birds once roamed the West in huge flocks, with hundreds alighting on piรฑon pines to glean nuts in the winter months. Now itโ€™s uncommon to see flocks of more than 100. In the last 50 years, the population of pinyon jays has declined by an estimated 80 percent.

The jay is listed as a โ€œspecies of greatest conservation needโ€ in New Mexico, and this year the conservation organization Defenders of Wildlife petitioned to list it under the Endangered Species Act, citing “woefully inadequateโ€ protections at the federal and state level.

The two major culprits of the jaysโ€™ decline are climate change and a long history of piรฑon pine removal carried out by federal agencies, including, increasingly, thinning and burning for wildfire prevention. Both have impacted piรฑon pines and led to declining nut production. Darr, now with the Defenders of Wildlife, said conservation is critical for the jay, but also โ€œfor an entire ecosystem, and all the other speciesโ€ that depend upon it.

In the midst of a historic megadrought in the Southwest and a record-setting wildfire season in New Mexico, land managers are racing to implement wildfire prevention measures. Congress this year directed billions in funds to federal agencies, who in turn are planning significantly increased treatments on millions of acres of federal lands.

In forests, these treatments often involve thinning: the removal of trees by machinery, by hand, or with herbicides. While historically piรฑon-juniper forests were systematically cleared using destructive techniques like chaining โ€” dragging thick steel chains between tractors to rip out trees in their path โ€” current practices by federal agencies involve more selective thinning.

But some bird biologists, like Darr, are sounding the alarm that even todayโ€™s thinning methods degrade pinyon jay habitat. These woodlands are already under extreme drought stress, especially in New Mexico, with predictions for widespread loss due to climate change. And some studies suggest thinned piรฑon-juniper forests are less resilient to beetle infestation and drought.

In 2004, the International Union for Conservation of Nature placed the pinyon jay on its Red List as โ€œvulnerableโ€ to extinction. It cited a current rate of decline of over 3 percent per year, and a historic loss of โ€œpossibly millionsโ€ of jays from the 1940s to the 1960s. During roughly the same period, an estimated 3 million acres of piรฑon-juniper woodland were destroyed to create pasture for livestock.

Bryan Bird, the Southwest program director at the Defenders of Wildlife, said piรฑon- juniper woodlands have long been maligned as having no economic value, and targeted for removal by private, state, and federal managers in favor of grasses for livestock. The current management imperative calls for thinning to reduce wildfire risk, he said, โ€œwhich most people think is benign” for the bird. โ€œBut it’s not,โ€ he added, noting that the specific habitat requirements of pinyon jays are just beginning to be understood.

Kristine Johnson is a retired faculty member of the biology department at the University of New Mexico who for 20 years has studied pinyon jays and their habitat. While thereโ€™s not yet research on the direct impacts of thinning or burning on pinyon jays, Johnson said studies show โ€œextreme thinningโ€ isnโ€™t good for nesting habitat.

And according to Bird, the flood of new federal funds for wildfire prevention combined with what he called a loosening of environmental rules is โ€œnot going to be good for the pinyon jay.โ€


New Mexico is home to four evergreen juniper species and the Colorado piรฑon, a small tree with short bottlebrush needles that sprout from dense branches. Woody cones tightly grasp its thick, egg-shaped seeds, drawing the garrulous jays to pry them out.

Johnson said the jays have several adaptations that make them excellent seed dispersers for piรฑon. Their long bills work like a chisel to crack open the tough piรฑon shell. Their esophagus expands to store up to 50 nuts, and since theyโ€™re highly social, one flock can plant millions of seeds in a fall season, Johnson said. Theyโ€™re strong fliers with a huge range of several thousand hectares. And while they have an excellent memory for recalling their nut caches, the seeds they don’t retrieve can become new piรฑon trees.

But this feat of co-evolution comes with vulnerabilities. On an irregular cycle, piรฑon pines produce a mast crop โ€” a particularly abundant supply of nuts. Pinyon jays rely on these mast crops for their reproduction, storing large quantities of seeds in the fall and winter to feed to their young in the spring. In a drought year without a mast crop or other bountiful food sources like insects, pinyon jays may not nest at all, Johnson said.

A pinyon jay holds a piรฑon pine cone in its long, curved beak. The birds pry open the cones for their oily seeds, which they cache across an impressive range, replanting the trees for future seasons. Visual: Sally King/NPS

In recent years, Johnson has observed smaller piรฑon mast crops, occurring with less frequency, and studies have linked drought and declining cone production. And according to Johnson, not all piรฑon juniper forests provide good habitat for jays. She recently created a model based on previous fieldwork to predict nesting habitat across New Mexico, and found jays tend to place their nests in larger trees in areas with dense canopy cover and low levels of recent disturbance. Her analysis found the highest quality habitat was โ€œsurprisingly scarce.โ€

A new survey may provide help for jay conservation. The New Mexico Avian Conservation Partners, a state chapter of the national bird conservation coalition Partners in Flight, is surveying for pinyon jays and other birds in thinned and unthinned piรฑon-juniper forests across New Mexico. Darr, a co-chair of NMACP, said they started the study out of a sense of urgency. โ€œWe didn’t have time to wait for a bunch of little studies to be done to get a consensusโ€ on how treatments affect jays, she said. Additional bird species that rely on these forests include Graceโ€™s warbler and the juniper titmouse, both listed as โ€œspecies of greatest conservation needโ€ by the state of New Mexico.

The second season of the three-year study wrapped up this year, Darr said, and results from the first yearโ€™s data show lower densities of some birds in the thinned areas.

The pinyon jay range, shown in yellow, extends over 150,000 square miles across 13 states. It overlaps forests of several different species of piรฑon pines, shown in purple, orange, and blue. Visual: Defenders of Wildlife, CC-BY 2021

The NMACP this year released recommendations for piรฑon-juniper management, co-authored by Darr, Johnson, and others. Darr said unlike scientists in other states, she and other biologists with the NMACP โ€œfeel the science is strong enoughโ€ to recommend land managers reconsider or reduce thinning in order to conserve pinyon jay habitat.

For her part, Johnson said some agency management plans โ€œare applied in sort of a generic way,โ€ without taking into account historic wildfire frequency, for example. She noted the scientistsโ€™ recommendation for treatments like thinning near human infrastructure, with โ€œless focus on altering the wild areas.โ€

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declined to make a subject-area expert available for an interview. In a non-attributed written response emailed to Undark by FWS public affairs specialist Allison Stewart in September, the agency cited โ€œlittle data on the effects of management on jay populations,โ€ and said โ€œwe are exploring the effect of the removal of pines and junipersโ€ to reduce wildfire risk in order โ€œto determine if these contribute to short term causes of decline.โ€

Johnson said some agencies are receptive to recommendations for management to conserve pinyon jays. The Pinyon Jay Multi-state Working Group, for example, recommends that thinning take place outside the breeding season, and that managers avoid thinning in habitat with nesting colonies. “But they’re huge bureaucracies and changing people’s minds takes a long time,โ€ Johnson said.

The recent Defenders of Wildlife petition also noted the impact of rules allowing the approval of projects in pinyon jay habitat without environmental assessments. โ€œIt just gives them a path to undertaking large habitat manipulations without considering the impact on this bird,โ€ Bird said.

The petition contains the first estimate of total acreage of piรฑon-juniper habitat currently treated by the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service in states with pinyon jay populations. The estimate โ€œsuggests extensive loss of suitable pinyon jay habitat on federal lands,โ€ with over 440,000 acres impacted, according to the petition.

Bird said that’s why listing the pinyon jay as endangered is critical: โ€œIt would require them to take a really hard look at what the impacts are to the birdโ€ and consult with the Fish and Wildlife Service before carrying out treatments in pinyon jay habitat. Johnson agreed, saying that listing the pinyon jay as endangered would have a โ€œhuge impactโ€ because agencies would be required to alter their management plans.


Throughout history, Indigenous peoples across the West have foraged for piรฑon nuts and relied on them as a critical food supply during the winter and lean years. When the Spanish arrived in the Southwest in the 1500s, they also began gathering the oily, protein-rich seeds. The long tradition of families harvesting piรฑon nuts continues in many communities today. Yet threats to piรฑon forests endanger these cultural practices.

โ€œI’ve been picking piรฑon since I could walk,โ€ said Raymond Sisneros, a retired horticulture teacher who farms outside the town of Cuba and traces his family line to the first Spanish settlers.

If the pines near their home weren’t producing, his family would drive to another site. His grandfather taught him how to harvest the nuts, and he sold them door-to-door in the nearby town. Piรฑon wasnโ€™t a treat, he said, but a “way of life,” a source of both food and revenue. Now it’s rare to find New Mexico piรฑon for sale.

The last time Sisneros had a big crop near his home was four years ago, and family members traveled from as far away as Tennessee and California to gather piรฑon. But those traditions may be coming to an end. โ€œI’m scared, because our piรฑon forest is going,โ€ he said. The large trees that once produced over a hundred pounds of piรฑon nuts are dying because of drought, he said.

Val Panteah, governor of Zuni Pueblo in northwestern New Mexico, said many tribal members gather piรฑon in the late fall. He remembers harvesting piรฑons with his family as a teenager, climbing into trees and shaking the branches so the nuts would fall onto a bedsheet on the ground.

Panteah has observed changes in piรฑon crops over the years. โ€œWhen I was really young, it seemed like it was every yearโ€ or every other year for a big piรฑon crop, he said, “but now, it feels like every four years.โ€

The jays may offer the best hope for resilience for piรฑon-juniper forests. Theyโ€™re “the only species that is capable of moving a woodland uphill if there’s been a fire,โ€ Johnson says, โ€œor replanting an area that’s been burned or decimated by insects or drought,โ€ by ferrying seeds away from the degraded area.

Yet these speciesโ€™ intimate interconnection also leads to what Johnson calls a vicious cycle. If the bird is lost, the woodlands can’t be replanted.

If the woodland isn’t replanted, the bird populations decline.

For the tree, for the bird, and for the people, she said, โ€œit would just be tragic for us to lose these woodlands.โ€


Sara Van Note is a print and audio reporter based in New Mexico.

This article was originally published on Undark. Read the original article.

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