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Feather & Bird Encyclopedia

Search and identify feathers by species — with feather type, plumage, colours, size, habitat, and how to tell them apart in the field.

Steller's Jay

Steller's Jay

A bold, crested jay of western forests with a sooty black head and back giving way to vivid blue wings and tail marked with fine dark barring.

corvid
Pinyon Jay

Pinyon Jay

A uniformly blue, short-tailed, crestless jay of the western pinyon-juniper woodlands, famous for its large nomadic flocks and close relationship with pine seeds.

corvid
Canada Jay

Canada Jay

A famously tame, fluffy grey jay of the North American boreal forest, known for boldly approaching campers and caching food for winter survival.

corvid
Brown Jay

Brown Jay

A large, plain brown jay of Mexico and Central America, lacking bright colors but notable for its size, loud calls, and whitish tail tip.

corvid
Azure Jay

Azure Jay

A richly blue-bodied jay of South America's Atlantic Forest, with a black head and breast that sharply set off its azure plumage.

corvid
Mexican Jay

Mexican Jay

A blue-and-grey jay of oak and pine-oak canyons in the southwestern US and Mexico, distinguished from similar scrub-jays by its plain grey underparts without a breast band.

corvid
Eurasian Jay

Eurasian Jay

A shy woodland corvid best known for its brilliant sky-blue, black-barred wing covert feathers — among the most eye-catching and easily recognized feathers found in temperate woodland.

corvid
Siberian Jay

Siberian Jay

A soft-plumaged jay of the northern boreal forest, easily recognized by its fluffy grey-brown body and rusty-orange wing and tail patches.

corvid
Lidth's Jay

Lidth's Jay

A richly colored jay found only on a few Japanese islands, combining a chestnut head and neck with a deep blue body and black face mask.

corvid
Green Jay

Green Jay

A vividly patterned jay with a green back, blue-and-black head, and bright yellow outer tail feathers, found in two widely separated populations across the Americas.

corvid
Blue Jay

Blue Jay

The Blue Jay is a large, vocal corvid whose bold blue, black-barred, white-tipped wing and tail feathers are among the most instantly recognizable of any North American songbird.

corvid
Woodhouse's Scrub-Jay

Woodhouse's Scrub-Jay

The interior counterpart to the California Scrub-Jay, this crestless jay of pinyon-juniper and interior scrub country shows a slightly duller blue and a less crisply defined breast band.

corvid
Florida Scrub-Jay

Florida Scrub-Jay

A blue-and-grey jay found only in Florida's fire-maintained scrub oak habitat, lacking a crest and closely tied to a single, shrinking ecosystem.

corvid
Western Scrub-Jay

Western Scrub-Jay

A crestless blue-and-gray jay of western oak woodland and scrubby habitat, easily told from crested jays by its plain head and blue "necklace" across the breast.

corvid
Plush-crested Jay

Plush-crested Jay

A South American jay with a velvety black face, glowing yellow eyes, and a soft blue patch on the nape, its tail broadly tipped in white.

corvid
Island Scrub-Jay

Island Scrub-Jay

A large, deeply colored scrub-jay found only on Santa Cruz Island off the California coast, notable for its bigger size and richer blue plumage than mainland relatives.

corvid
California Scrub-Jay

California Scrub-Jay

A crestless, blue-and-gray jay of California's oak woodlands and gardens, showing a blue necklace across a whitish throat and gray-brown back.

corvid
Black-throated Magpie-Jay

Black-throated Magpie-Jay

A close relative of the White-throated Magpie-Jay, distinguished by a bold black throat and breast band and an even longer, more elaborate tail.

corvid
White-throated Magpie-Jay

White-throated Magpie-Jay

A dramatic Central American jay with a long, forward-curling crest and an exceptionally long, graduated blue-and-white tail.

corvid
Clark's Nutcracker

Clark's Nutcracker

A pale gray, crow-like bird of high mountain pine forests, best known for storing thousands of pine seeds each autumn to survive winter.

corvid