So What Should We Call This – a Grue Jay?

September 18, 2025 • by Marc Airhart

The rare hybrid offspring of a blue jay and a green jay is likely a result of weather-related shifts in the range of two species.

Three birds are shown. On the left is a blue jay, which is primarily blue with some patches of white on wing tips, around the face and on the chest. On the right is a green jay, which is primarily green with a lighter colored chest and a mix of blue and black patches on the face. In the center is a hybrid bird, which is primarily blue and resembles a blue jay, but with a larger area of black on the face, more akin to a green jay.

A rare hybrid bird identified in a suburb of San Antonio, Texas (center panel, credit: Brian Stokes) is the result of mating between a male blue jay (left, credit: Travis Maher/Cornell Lab of Ornithology/Macaulay Library) and a female green jay (right, credit: Dan O’Brien/Cornell Lab of Ornithology/Macaulay Library).


A map of south and central Texas with green points representing green jay occurrences, blue points denoting blue jay occurrences and black points indicating localities of recorded co-occurrence.

Green Jay and Blue Jay occurrences in Texas reported from 2000 to 2023 in eBird, a popular app for birders and citizen scientists to share their observations. Green points represent green jay occurrences, blue points denote blue jay occurrences and black points indicate localities of recorded co-occurrence. Credit: Brian Stokes.

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