The blue jay is a native bird to North America and can be found as far north as Canada and as far south as Central America.\n
Blue jays are mysterious birds and have qualities that are very different from most other birds.\n
These unique creatures have interested scientists for many years with their unpredictable activity.\n
Here are nine fascinating facts about the blue jay bird.\n
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Although blue jays appear to have blue feathers, they, in fact, aren\u2019t blue; they are brown.\n
If you were to take a blue jay\u2019s feather and break it down, the pigment left would be brown.\n
However, blue jays are the same, making it difficult to identify whether they are male or female.\n
This is known as sexual monomorphism.\n
For blue jays, the easiest way to tell them apart is that males are usually larger than females.\n
They believed that blue jays were mischievous birds that worked alongside coyotes and foxes.\n
Young boys would eat blue jays tongues as it was believed it would make them better climbers.\n
The average lifespan of most small wild birds can be anything from two to six years.\n
But blue jays in the wild will live to an average of five to seven years.\n
In captivity, they have been recorded to live up to 26 years!\n
Blue jays have predators such as hawks, cats, and owls which are all the most common causes of death for blue jays.\n
The major league baseball team, Toronto Blue Jays, named their team after this beautiful bird, and the blue jay is the team logo.\n
Their mascot is a blue jay named Ace.\n
The blue jay is also the official mascot for Johns Hopkins University in Maryland and Elmhurst University in Illinois.\n
Blue jays can produce loud calls and screams that imitate not only hawks but cats and humans too.\n
Research suggests that blue jays will imitate the call of a hawk to see if they get a reply.\n
Blue jays will usually only fly at around 20-25 mph (32-40 kph).\n
Crows will fly at around 70 mph (112 kph) and ravens 50 mph (80 kph).\n
Blue jays are the forest dwellers of North America, and they continue to be birds of mystery.\n
Their beautiful blue appearance makes them look elegant, but these are birds of mischief.\n