Azure-naped jay
The azure-naped jay is a species of bird in the family Corvidae.
It is found in Brazil, Colombia, and Venezuela.
Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forest and subtropical or tropical dry shrubland.
Taxonomy
The Azure-naped jay was first described by Alan F. Gentry based on a single specimen, marked as a male, from the T. B. Wilson Collection of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.The genus Cyanocorax comes from the Ancient Greek kuanos and korax. The species epithet heilprini honours Gentry's friend, Professor Angelo Heilprin.
There are two identified subspecies:
- C. h. heilprini. The nominate subspecies.
- C. h. hafferi. This subspecies, Campina Jay, was described as a new species in 2013, but the South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithologists' Union did not support the proposal.
Description
Distribution and habitat
This species is a native resident species of the Amazon basin, found from Southeast Colombia to Southwest Venezuela and extreme northwest Brazil.It is a bird of the lower tropical zone, found at altitudes of 250m and below. Its preferred habitat is stunted forests, forest edges and second growth on sandy soils in the upper Río Negro basin, as well as in lighter savannah woodland. Two recent surveys of birds Amazon basin found the Azure-naped jay is endemic to areas of white sand forest, and is not found in nearby areas of nearby terra firme forests, seasonally flooded forests and Amazonian savannas.