Eurasian Nutcracker
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The spotted nutcracker, Eurasian nutcracker, or simply nutcracker (''Nucifraga caryocatactes'') is a passerine bird slightly larger than the
Eurasian jay The Eurasian jay (''Garrulus glandarius'') is a species of passerine bird in the crow family Corvidae. It has pinkish brown plumage with a black stripe on each side of a whitish throat, a bright blue panel on the upper wing and a black tail. The ...
. It has a much larger bill and a slimmer looking head without any crest. The feathering over its body is predominantly chocolate brown with distinct white spots and streaks (absent from most of the body in southern Asian populations, which are sometimes treated as a separate species, southern nutcracker ''N. hemispila''). The wings and upper tail are virtually black with a greenish-blue gloss. The spotted nutcracker is one of three currently-recognized species of nutcracker. The
Kashmir nutcracker The Kashmir nutcracker or large-spotted nutcracker (''Nucifraga multipunctata'') is a passerine bird related to the spotted nutcracker. Until recently, it was considered a subspecies. It is found in the western Himalayas. Taxonomy and systemat ...
(''Nucifraga multipunctata'') was formerly considered a subspecies of the spotted. The other member of the genus, Clark's nutcracker (''N. columbiana''), occurs in western North America.


Taxonomy

The nutcracker was one of the many species originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of ''Systema Naturae'', and it still bears its original name ''Nucifraga caryocatactes''. The scientific name is a
reduplication In linguistics, reduplication is a morphological process in which the root or stem of a word (or part of it) or even the whole word is repeated exactly or with a slight change. The classic observation on the semantics of reduplication is Edwa ...
; ''nucifraga'' is a New Latin translation of German ''Nussbrecher'', "nut-breaker" based on Latin ''nucis'' "nut", and ''frangere'' "to shatter", and ''caryocatactes'' based on Greek: ''karuon'' "nut", and ''kataseio'' "to shatter". The common English name ''nutcracker'' first appears in 1693 in a translation of a German travel guide, where it is a calque on the German name ''Nußknacker'', as the bird was not recorded in England until 1753. Other Germanic languages have etymologically related names: Danish: ''nøddekrige''; Dutch: ''notenkraker''; Norwegian: ''nøttekråke'';
Swedish Swedish or ' may refer to: Anything from or related to Sweden, a country in Northern Europe. Or, specifically: * Swedish language, a North Germanic language spoken primarily in Sweden and Finland ** Swedish alphabet, the official alphabet used by ...
: ''nötkråka''.


Subspecies

There are nine recognised subspecies * nominate ''caryocatactes'' (Linnaeus, 1785) Scandinavia to northern and eastern Europe; Caucasus and northern Kazakhstan; winters to southern Russia * ''macrorhynchos'' (Brehm, 1823) northern and northeastern Asia; irruptions to northern Iran, Korea and northern China; vagrant Turkey * ''rothschildi'' (Hartert, 1903) Tian Shan and Dzungarian Alatau mountains, Kazakhstan and China * ''japonica'' (Hartert, 1897) central and southern Kuril Islands, Hokkaido, Honshū and Hondo, Japan * ''owstoni'' (Ingram, 1910) Taiwan * ''interdicta'' (Kleinschmidt and Weigold, 1922) mountains of northern China (
Liaoning Liaoning () is a coastal province in Northeast China that is the smallest, southernmost, and most populous province in the region. With its capital at Shenyang, it is located on the northern shore of the Yellow Sea, and is the northernmost ...
) * ''hemispila'' (Vigors, 1831) Himalayas (western Nepal to southern Kashmir) * ''macella'' (Thayer and Bangs, 1909) eastern Himalayas to southern Tibet, western Nepal, northern Myanmar and southwest China * ''yunnanensis'' (Ingram 1910) southeast China ( Yunnan) Some authors split this species into two, a northern species containing ''caryocatactes'', ''japonicus'', ''interdicta'', ''rothschildi'' and ''macrorhynchos'' and a southern species including ''hemispila'', ''yunnanensis'', ''macella'' and ''owstoni'', based on distinct plumage differences between the two groups.


Description

The spotted nutcracker is a dark brown, broad-winged, short-tailed corvid. Body plumage is mid-to-dark chocolate brown, heavily spotted with white on face, neck, mantle and underparts. It has a large white loral spot, a white eye-ring, blackish-brown cap extending onto the nape, dark blackish wings with a greenish-blue gloss, all white vent, and dark tail with white corners above and a white terminal band on the undertail. In flight, broad wings, white vent and short tail are noticeable; the flight undulating. The black bill is slender and rather long, sharply pointed, and varies in size amongst races. The iris, legs and feet are black. Nutcrackers range from 32–38 cm in length (from tip of beak to tip of tail) and have a wingspan ranging from 49–53 cm. The voice is similar to that of the
Eurasian jay The Eurasian jay (''Garrulus glandarius'') is a species of passerine bird in the crow family Corvidae. It has pinkish brown plumage with a black stripe on each side of a whitish throat, a bright blue panel on the upper wing and a black tail. The ...
and is loud and harsh. It is described as ''kraak-kraak-kraak-kraak''.


Behaviour


Feeding

The most important food resources for this species are the seeds ( pine nuts) of various pines (''Pinus'' sp.), principally the cold-climate (far northern and high altitude) species of white pine (''Pinus'' subgenus ''Strobus'') with large seeds: ''P. armandii'', ''P. bungeana'', ''P. cembra'', ''P. gerardiana'', ''P. koraiensis'', ''P. parviflora'', ''P. peuce'', P. pumila'', ''P. sibirica'' and ''P. wallichiana''. In some regions, where none of these pines occur, the seeds of
spruce A spruce is a tree of the genus ''Picea'' (), a genus of about 35 species of coniferous evergreen trees in the family Pinaceae, found in the northern temperate and boreal (taiga) regions of the Earth. ''Picea'' is the sole genus in the subfami ...
(''Picea'' sp.) and
hazel The hazel (''Corylus'') is a genus of deciduous trees and large shrubs native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere. The genus is usually placed in the birch family Betulaceae,Germplasmgobills Information Network''Corylus''Rushforth, K. (1999). ...
nuts (''Corylus'' sp.) form an important part of the diet too. The forms that take hazel nuts have thicker bills for cracking their hard shells, with a special ridge on the inside of the bill edge near the base. If the shell is too hard, it holds the nut between its feet and hacks at it with its bill like a chisel. A special adaptation is found in the tongue of the nutcracker. The tip of the tongue forks with two long pointed appendages which are keratinized into nail like surfaces. This is thought to help them handle and shell conifer seeds. Surplus seed is always stored for later use and it is this species that is responsible for the sowing of new trees of their favoured pines, including the re-establishment of the Swiss pine (''Pinus cembra'') over large areas in the Alps of central Europe formerly cleared by man. Various insects are also taken, and also small
birds Birds are a group of warm-blooded vertebrates constituting the class Aves (), characterised by feathers, toothless beaked jaws, the laying of hard-shelled eggs, a high metabolic rate, a four-chambered heart, and a strong yet lightweigh ...
, their eggs and nestlings, small
rodents Rodents (from Latin , 'to gnaw') are mammals of the order Rodentia (), which are characterized by a single pair of continuously growing incisors in each of the upper and lower jaws. About 40% of all mammal species are rodents. They are nat ...
and
carrion Carrion () is the decaying flesh of dead animals, including human flesh. Overview Carrion is an important food source for large carnivores and omnivores in most ecosystems. Examples of carrion-eaters (or scavengers) include crows, vultures, c ...
such as roadkills. It digs out bumble bee and wasp nests avidly to get at the grubs.


Breeding

Nutcracker couples stay together for life and their territory expands between 20 and 30 acres. Nesting is always early in this species across its whole range, so as to make the best use of pine nuts stored the previous autumn. The nest is usually built high in a conifer (sometimes broadleaved trees are used) and usually on the sunny side. There are normally 2-4 eggs laid and incubated for 18 days. Both sexes feed the young which are usually fledged by about 23 days and stay with their parents for many months, following them to learn the food storage techniques essential for survival in their harsh environment.


Distribution

The spotted nutcracker has an extensive range forming a broad swathe east–west from Scandinavia right across northern Europe, Siberia and to eastern Asia, including
Japan Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
, inhabiting the huge taiga
conifer Conifers are a group of conifer cone, cone-bearing Spermatophyte, seed plants, a subset of gymnosperms. Scientifically, they make up the phylum, division Pinophyta (), also known as Coniferophyta () or Coniferae. The division contains a single ...
forests in the north. Three further disjunct populations occur in mountain conifer forests further south, one centered on the mountains of central and southeast Europe (the Alps, the Carpathians and the
Balkan Peninsula The Balkans ( ), also known as the Balkan Peninsula, is a geographical area in southeastern Europe with various geographical and historical definitions. The region takes its name from the Balkan Mountains that stretch throughout the who ...
mountains); another in the western Himalayas; and the third in western
China China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a country in East Asia. It is the world's most populous country, with a population exceeding 1.4 billion, slightly ahead of India. China spans the equivalent of five time zones and ...
seaboard and separated from the northern population by a relatively small gap in the north centre of China. See subspecies list above for race distributions. Some of the populations can be separated on bill size. This species has a large range, extending over 10,000,000 km2 globally. It also has a large global population, with an estimate of between 800,000-1,700,000 individuals in Europe. Spotted nutcrackers are not migratory, but will erupt out of range when a cone crop failure leaves them short of a food supply, the thin-billed eastern race ''macrorhynchos'' being the more likely to do this.Lars Svensson et al. (1999), ''Collins Bird Guide.'' London: HarperCollins, p. 332. Britain records very sporadic vagrants, but in 1968 over 300 nutcrackers visited Britain as part of a larger irruption into western Europe, probably due to a spell of early cold weather in Siberia.


References


External links


Spotted nutcracker videos, photos & sounds
on the Internet Bird Collection {{Taxonbar , from=Q184820 spotted nutcracker Birds of Eurasia Birds of Russia spotted nutcracker spotted nutcracker