Orlando Sentinel

Bye, bye birdie

Florida ScrubJay would oust mockingbir­d as state’s official bird

- By Roger Simmons

The threatened Florida Scrub-Jay would replace the Northern Mockingbir­d as Florida’s official state bird if a new bill filed in the legislatur­e becomes law.

Sen. Tina Polsky, a Democrat from Boca Raton, filed SB 162 earlier this month in her attempt to elevate the Florida Scrub-Jay. It would remove the mockingbir­d, which has been the Sunshine State’s official bird since 1927.

Polsky’s bill noted that the Scrub-Jay is the only bird species that lives exclusivel­y in Florida. It can found be in small habitats of low-growing scrub oak and sandy soils across Central Florida, from the Ocala National Forest south to near Lake Okeechobee.

The Northern Mockingbir­d, meanwhile, can be found in every state across the continenta­l U.S. in addition to most of Mexico and parts of the Caribbean.

“Protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, the Florida Scrub-Jay is also protected as a threatened species by the federal Endangered Species Act and as a federally designated threatened species by the Florida Endangered and Threatened Species rule,” Polsky’s bill explained.

Polsky filed a similar bill last year that failed, but it did garner the support of a group of Seminole High School students who were advocating for the Florida Scrub-Jay.

“Since the Scrub-Jay is found only in Florida, it should be chosen as the state bird without a doubt,” Navya Sharma, a senior at Seminole High, told the Sentinel in December 2022. She said she hoped the state’s designatio­n would bring attention to preserving the threatened bird’s natural scrub habitat.

While the legislatur­e didn’t adopt the ScrubJay measure last year, the students were able to get Seminole County commission­ers make it the county’s official feathered creature.

 ?? ROGER SIMMONS/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? A Florida Scrub-Jay hops around a pine tree with two acorns in its mouth in September at the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge.
ROGER SIMMONS/ORLANDO SENTINEL A Florida Scrub-Jay hops around a pine tree with two acorns in its mouth in September at the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge.

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