Gray jay: The ‘Perfect bird for Canada’
OTTAWA — Smart, hardy and friendly — the Royal Canadian Geographic Society says its choice for Canada’s national bird epitomizes the best of the country’s national traits.
The gray jay, also known as the whiskey jack, was announced Wednesday evening as the winner of the society’s laborious two-year search for a fitting avian Canadian representative. “The gray what?” you may ask. The gray jay, once known as the Canada jay and the “wisakedjak” of folklore in indigenous cultures, is found in the boreal forests of every Canadian province and territory but nowhere else on the planet.
The robin-sized cousin of the raven and crow has the same brain-to-body ratio as dolphins and chimpanzees, is lauded for its friendliness and intelligence, and spends its entire life in the Canadian woods — observed incubating eggs in temperatures as low as minus 30 C.
“It’s a wonderful poster child for the boreal forest, our national and provincial parks, and for climate change,” said ornithologist David Bird, part of the expert panel that helped debate the final choice whittled from a list se- lected by tens of thousands of Canadians. “So it’s a perfect bird for Canada.” The gray jay muscled out other contenders, including the common loon, snowy owl, black-capped chickadee and Canada goose, in a contest that garnered national attention attracting almost 50,000 online voters.
“That kind of engagement really was certainly not something we expected,” Aaron Kylie, the editor of the society’s Canadian Geographic magazine, said in an interview.
And it wasn’t that so many Canadians voted online, or the national media attention.
“We had thousands of comments, and the comments aren’t just a sentence,” said Kylie.
“They’re paragraphs, they are full pages and they are very impassioned, passionate, personal stories about people’s connections to a specific bird they wanted to put forward as the national bird. It almost doesn’t matter which bird you’d want to pick in the end.”
The federal government has not committed to naming a national bird — let alone the gray jay — but the Canadian Geographic Society argues that Canada’s 150th anniversary in the coming year offers a perfect opportunity.
The gray jay actually came third in voting behind the loon and the snowy owl, but was chosen following a public debate and deliberations by a panel. The winner was announced Wednesday evening at the society’s annual dinner in Ottawa.
Bird (the ornithologist, not the jay) said the whiskey jack has been shown to be “the smartest bird on the planet.”
They’re renowned in First Nations lore for warning people of predators in the woods and even leading lost travellers home by calling from tree to tree.