In a patch of piñon pines, Bianca Sicich, a graduate pupil at New Mexico State College in Las Cruces, hides in a blind holding a string. The string is hooked up to the door of a selfmade entice of PVC and wire that she’s baited with sunflower seeds and some piñon nuts. She sits there quietly for hours, awaiting a flock of Pinyon Jays, a species vital to the piñon-juniper ecosystem’s survival. If she’s profitable in capturing birds in her entice, she’s going to tag them with radio transmitters to comply with their actions throughout massive residence territories. By means of this and different research, Sicich desires to study whether or not Pinyon Jays can have sufficient meals if piñon pines, the birds’ most important meals supply, cease producing seed because the local weather warms and drought intensifies.
Pinyon Jays and piñon pines share an intimate relationship. The cerulean corvids reside within the bushes year-round, nesting of their branches and consuming piñon seeds. In return, the birds assist the bushes proliferate. Each few years, piñon pines produce a mast crop of cones. When that occurs, inside weeks a big flock of Pinyon Jays can harvest thousands and thousands of seeds to cache for winter. This bounty lets them nest in larger numbers and lift extra younger. However they overlook the place they cover 10 p.c of seeds; these develop into the following technology of bushes. Though different animals additionally carry seeds. Pinyon Jays, which haul 50 at a time, are the one dispersers capable of reestablish pines after disturbances like fires and bug infestations.
Sadly, due to drought, bugs, and growth, piñon pines are producing much less seed, pushing each species right into a snowballing decline. Over the previous 40 years, the inhabitants of this as soon as widespread hen has declined by 85 p.c throughout its vary, which stretches from Baja California to Wyoming. With out intervention, the remaining inhabitants is anticipated to say no by an extra 50 p.c by 2035, making it one of many quickest declining hen species in the US. These declines spurred the nonprofit Defenders of Wildlife in April 2022 to petition the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) for an inventory beneath the Endangered Species Act. The company’s deadline to reply has lengthy since handed; a draft 90-day resolution on whether or not FWS will think about itemizing the species was due this summer time. The petition stays in inner evaluate, in keeping with Defenders of Wildlife.
In some areas of New Mexico greater than 90 p.c of piñon pines in a woodland have died off as a result of long-term drought and bark beetle infestations. Video: Christina M. Selby
A number of components are behind the losses of each species: previous conversion of piñon-juniper woodland into grazing lands; trendy builders clearing the habitat (together with jay nesting colonies) to construct housing and vitality initiatives; and modifications in habitat as a result of local weather change. Ips confusus, often known as the pinyon pine beetle and native to the Southwest, additionally create issues. In a wholesome woodland, the beetles function hen meals and assist bushes decompose. When the bugs tunnel too deep into the wooden, bushes produce sap to push them out. However larger temperatures and long-term drought situations pushed by local weather change have interrupted this self-defense mechanism. Beetle infestations now overwhelm already pressured woodlands, inflicting mass die-offs and a big lower in seed manufacturing. With out ample meals, Pinyon Jays forgo nesting, leading to inhabitants declines. With out jays, the woodland might not be capable of transfer into extra liveable areas because the local weather modifications.
Warmth and drought intervene with piñon bushes’ skill to supply sap, which is their pure protection towards beetle invasions. Video: Christina M. Selby
Scientists face difficulties in understanding the Pinyon Jay inhabitants as a result of the birds’ habitat isn’t effectively studied. In some areas piñon bushes have died en masse. However land managers debate whether or not piñon-juniper woodland is in decline general. Whereas massive tracts have been cleared or died off, in different areas bushes are increasing into sage flats and climbing upslope. “What’s contributing to the decline of Pinyon Jays is one thing concerning the high quality of the habitat, slightly than the quantity of the habitat,” says biologist John Boone, analysis coordinator at Nice Basin Chook Observatory, who has studied the species for 14 years. Analysis is revealing that at the moment’s woodlands are much less various, much less dynamic, and fewer productive than they as soon as had been, he says.
Learning the jays themselves can be a problem. The nomadic, social birds journey in massive flocks throughout territories that may stretch 5 miles or extra. To deal with information gaps, a number of graduate college students and scientists, like Sicich, are monitoring jays utilizing satellite tv for pc tags and radio transmitters. The info will assist illuminate how Pinyon Jays use their massive residence territories: the place they eat, relaxation, play, and nest.
Transmitters alone can’t acquire sufficient information to know this athletic species. To assist researchers collect data on the jays’ whereabouts and behaviors, the Nice Basin Chook Observatory launched a group science program throughout the pandemic, working with Audubon Southwest, Lahontan Audubon Society, Grand Canyon Belief, and different teams. Utilizing eBird in addition to customized smartphone apps, birders can collect detailed information on Pinyon Jays’ presence, absence, and habits. “I get two or three emails every week from individuals saying they’ve seen massive declines in Pinyon Jays at their feeders and are glad we’re doing one thing to deal with this,” says Audrey Kruse, Grand Canyon Belief’s group engagement director. The challenge is at present recruiting volunteers all through the jays’ vary, particularly in Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado. The hope is that this extra information will assist construct a extra full image of the lives of Pinyon Jays and assist develop conservation measures to assist this iconic hen of the West thrive once more.
Some measures are already being put into follow. Organizations such because the Pinyon Jay Working Group and New Mexico Avian Conservation Companions have revealed tips for adjusting land administration practices to raised account for Pinyon Jays’ wants and adapt to a altering local weather. To enhance the habitat, land managers can defend areas the place birds nest and piñons are identified to supply massive mast. Landowners can replant native grasses and forbs eliminated by livestock grazing or building; these native species lock in moisture and hold soil temperatures cool, which helps piñon pines’ skill to supply seeds and face up to drought.
Consultants are additionally trying to the long run. “With local weather change, we now have to simply accept that some areas will change into unsuitable Pinyon Jay habitat,” says Peggy Darr, who began working with the species as Santa Fe County’s wildlife biologist and useful resource administration specialist and now works for Defenders of Wildlife. “That is why it is much more vital to do a bunch of analysis to determine the place these woodlands will persist and defend them.” She’s experimenting with a number of approaches to help areas the place woodlands are anticipated to persist beneath a hotter local weather. In New Mexico, the epicenter of the Pinyon Jay inhabitants, meaning defending bushes on north and east sides of slopes the place temperatures are cooler. She’s additionally working to manage erosion and entice water downslope of bushes.
“Figuring out areas the place piñon pines would possibly persist and conserving these slopes is one vital approach that we adapt to local weather change,” Darr says. She’s additionally working to enhance the bushes’ replica. Along with experimenting with methods to germinate piñon seeds and plant seedlings, Darr desires to seek out methods to spice up the seed manufacturing of current bushes in areas that is likely to be local weather resilient. She is launching a program to work with suburban landowners in areas the place Pinyon Jay flocks reside to enhance habitat there. Landowners can take care of bushes of their yards to encourage piñon masts, for instance by watering or controlling erosion round sure goal bushes. Darr’s objective is to supply seed for analysis and reforestation, in addition to present piñon nuts for jays that reside within the suburbs. If the Pinyon Jay goes extinct in some areas, these suburban flocks might someday change into a supply for repopulation.
These efforts are stop-gap measures supposed to maintain the piñon woodlands till Pinyon Jay populations get well, when they’ll resume their work spreading seeds and planting bushes. A list beneath the Endangered Species Act might present further protections and instruments to assist the hen and different susceptible species within the habitat. However in the end it is going to take all these efforts—analysis science, group science, and inventive land administration—to carry the species again.
“With the Pinyon Jays decline being as unhealthy as it’s, it is crucial to be attempting every part we are able to, even when it appears outdoors of the field,” Darr says. “No concept is a foul concept.”
A flock of Pinyon Jays takes off from a snow-covered woodland. Video: Christina M. Selby
This story initially ran within the Winter 2022 concern as “The Pinyon Puzzle.” To obtain our print journal, change into a member by making a donation at the moment.