Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 9, No. 1, July 1936
Clark's Nutcrackers Banded for
Study
By Chas. W. Quaintance, Ranger-Naturalist
Although some eighty species of birds
have been recorded in Crater Lake National Park, relatively little is
known about how they live. This is the condition of zoology in general;
however, in recent years students of zoology have studied animals in
their natural state. The results of such studies may be of practical
value, and too, they may serve to broaden our mental horizons, and
provide a background for our knowledge of animal behavior.
Some of the facts of natural history to
be ascertained by studying animals in their natural state may be listed.
Mating activities vary, even in related species of animals. It is
desirable to know something of the nesting habits, the time of year when
the young are born, whether the parents mate for life, and other related
information. It is of interest to know what animals eat throughout the
year, and whether their food habits have any economic bearing. Other
activities and facts to be learned are those concerned with their daily
and seasonal movements, including migrations. Information on their
voice, mannerisms, and the age that animals normally attain is of value.
One animal chosen for study in Crater
Lake National Park is a bird, the most conspicuous one in the rim area,
one which is associated in the minds of visitors with the Golden-mantled
Ground Squirrels. This bird,
Nucifraga columbiana, called variously, Clark's Nutcracker,
Clark's Crow, Clark's Jay, and though confused with the Gray Jay, "Camp
Robber", is a member of the crow family. It is named after Captain
William Clark, of Lewis and Clark fame, who collected in Idaho the first
specimens known to science. The bird is unmistakable in its sharply
contrasting coat of gray, black and white.
In this study, observations were made
at close range and at a distance, using field glasses. Catching the
birds for banding was somewhat of a problem. After experimenting
unsuccessfully with government sparrow traps and with figure four traps,
it was found that a large hood made of one-inch mesh chicken wire would
get the birds fairly easily. Peanuts were used for bait. The chief
trouble was that of keeping the Golden-mantled Ground Squirrels away
until Nutcrackers got the bait.
Sixteen Nutcrackers were banded, each
with an aluminum band of the United States Biological Survey and with
three molded celluloid bands. The aluminum band is numbered so that the
capture of any bird may ultimately be recorded in the Washington Office
of the Biological Survey. The three celluloid bands on each of the
sixteen birds were selected from a choice of four colors: pink, blue,
yellow and red. With three, colored celluloid bands and one aluminum
band to a bird, a large number of banding combinations were possible.
The weight of the four bands is estimated to be to the bird what a wrist
watch is to a man. These markers do not seem to interfere in any way
with the progress of the birds. The fact that they came back to the
banding station and the trap indicates that they have no unpleasant
association with the experience of being banded. Often after being
released (from banding) the birds attempted to peck off the ornaments;
however, in a short while they became accustomed to the bands. They will
wear the bands for years without any ill effects. The table on page 7 of
this issue of Nature Notes gives the banding record of the
sixteen Clark's Nutcrackers and one Oregon Jay banded in Crater Lake
National Park during the summer of 1936.
Although the results from a study of
this kind are not always immediate, at least one fact is already
apparent. At the head of the Lake Trail, the birds which have been
banded have been recorded from time to time at this same place, and
still more come there which are unbanded. This enables one to say with
certainty that although only about four birds appear at a time, a great
many different individuals actually visit this place during a day.
Other information will come out of this
study, and it will be especially interesting if during the winter,
observations of the banded birds are reported to the park staff.

|
Banding Record - Clark's Nutcracker |
Biological Survey
Band No. |
Date of Banding
(1936) |
Arrangement of Bands |
Left Leg
Up |
Left Leg
Low |
Right Leg
Up |
Right Leg
Low |
| C 301051 |
July 24 |
R |
R |
R |
X |
| C 301053 |
July 24 |
B |
B |
B |
X |
| C 301054 |
July 24 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
X |
| C 301055 |
July 24 |
P |
P |
P |
X |
| C 301056 |
July 24 |
R |
P |
B |
X |
| C 301057 |
July 24 |
B |
Y |
- |
X |
| C 301058 |
July 25 |
R |
R |
B |
X |
| C 301059 |
July 25 |
P |
P |
B |
X |
| C 301060 |
July 25 |
Y |
Y |
B |
X |
| C 301061 |
July 25 |
B |
B |
R |
X |
| C 301062 |
July 30 |
Y |
Y |
R |
X |
| C 301063 |
July 30 |
Y |
Y |
P |
X |
| C 301064 |
July 27 |
P |
P |
Y |
X |
| C 301065 |
July 30 |
R |
B |
R |
X |
| C 301066 |
August 3 |
P |
B |
P |
X |
| C 301067 |
August 3 |
P |
R |
P |
X |
| C 301068 |
August 3 |
Y |
R |
X |
Y |
|
R-red B-blue Y-yellow X-Biological Survey |
|
Banding Record - Oregon Jay |
| C 301052 |
July 14 |
Left Leg B |
Right Leg X |