Difference between revisions of "Jackdaw" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Taxobox
 
{{Taxobox
 
| name = Jackdaw
 
| name = Jackdaw
 
| status = LC
 
| status = LC
 
| status_system = iucn3.1
 
| status_system = iucn3.1
| status_ref = <ref>BirdLife International, "[http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/146641 ''Corvus monedula'']," In ''2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species'' (IUCN, 2008). Retrieved December 2, 2008.}</ref>
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| status_ref = <ref>BirdLife International, "[http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/146641 ''Corvus monedula'']," In ''2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species'' (IUCN, 2008). Retrieved December 2, 2008.</ref>
 
| image = Dohle (Corvus monedula) d1.jpg
 
| image = Dohle (Corvus monedula) d1.jpg
 
| image_width = 240px
 
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| range_map_caption = Jackdaw range
 
| range_map_caption = Jackdaw range
 
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'''Jackdaw''' is the common name for a Eurasian bird, '''''Corvus monedula''''', one of the smallest species in the [[genus]] of [[crow]]s and [[raven]]s, characterized by black plumage, a gray nape, and distinctive gray-white iris. It is found across Europe, western Asia, and North Africa. It is sometimes known as the '''Eurasian jackdaw''', '''European jackdaw''', '''Western jackdaw''', or formerly simply the '''daw'''.
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'''Jackdaw''' is the common name for a gregarious Eurasian bird, '''''Corvus monedula''''', one of the smallest species in the [[genus]] of [[crow]]s and [[raven]]s, characterized by black plumage, a gray nape, and distinctive gray-white iris. It is found across Europe, western Asia, and North Africa. It is sometimes known as the '''Eurasian jackdaw''', '''European jackdaw''', '''Western jackdaw''', or formerly simply the '''daw'''.
  
The term jackdaw also is used for another member of the ''[[Corvus]]'' genus, the Daurian jackdaw (''Corvus dauricus''). It is quite similar in appearance and habits to ''C. monedula'', but the Daurian jackdaw has a black iris, and many of the Daurian jackdaws have large areas of creamy white on the lower parts, extending up around the neck in a thick collar. This article, however, will be limited to discussion of ''C. monedula''.
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The term jackdaw also is used for another member of the ''[[Corvus]]'' genus, the Daurian jackdaw ''(Corvus dauricus),'' which is found in [[Siberia]], [[Mongolia]], and [[China]]. It is quite similar in appearance and habits to ''C. monedula'', but the Daurian jackdaw has a black iris, and many of the Daurian jackdaws have large areas of creamy white on the lower parts, extending up around the neck. This article, however, will be limited to discussion of ''C. monedula.''
  
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Like the crows and ravens, the jackdaw in some cultures is sometimes considered a bad omen, such as an omen of death. However, jackdaws provide important functions. [[Ecology|Ecologically]], they play a role in [[food chain]]s, consuming animal and plant matter and being consumed by [[fox]]es, [[cat]]s, birds of prey, and various egg predators. For humans, the highly intelligent jackdaws have often been a focus of interest. Among interesting behaviors of jackdaws is the fact that they practice food sharing, where donors offer food to a number of individuals, even regardless of kinship, and they share their preferred food more readily than less preferred food. Such sharing of food and objects is rare even in [[primate]]s and jackdaws show a much higher level of active giving than documented for [[chimpanzee]]s.
  
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==Overview and description==
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[[Image:Corvus monedula fledgling 2.jpg|right|240px|thumb|fledgling]]
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The ''Corvus'' genus in the Corvidae family incldues [[crow]]s, [[raven]]s, [[rook (bird)|rook]]s (one extant species, ''C. frugilegus''), and [[jackdaw]]s (two species, ''C. monedula'' and ''C. dauricus''). These are large [[passerine]] [[bird]]s that are characterized by strong feet and bills, feathered, rounded [[nostril]]s, strong tails and wings, rictal bristles, and a single [[molt]] each year (most passerines molt twice).
  
==Overview and description==
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The jackdaw ''(C. monedula)'' is one of the smallest species in the ''Corvus'' genus, measuring 34 to 39 centimeters (13-15 inches) in length. Most of the plumage is black or grayish black except for the cheeks, nape, and neck, which are light gray to grayish silver. The iris of adults is grayish white or silvery white, the only member of the genus outside of the [[Australasia]]n region to have this feature. The iris of juvenile jackdaws is light blue. Sexes and ages are alike (Porter et al. 1996; Mullarney et al. 1999).
The ''Corvus'' genus in the Corvidae family incldues [[crow]]s, [[raven]]s, [[rook (bird)|rook]]s (one extant species, ''C. frugilegus''), and [[jackdaw]]s (two species, ''C. monedula'' and ''C. dauricus''). These are large [[passerine]] [[bird]]s that are characterized by strong feet and bills, feathered, rounded [[nostril]]s, strong tails and wings, rictal bristles, and a single [[molt]] each year (most [[passerine]]s molt twice).  
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In flight, jackdaws are separable from other corvids by their smaller size, faster and deeper wingbeats, and proportionately narrower and less fingered wings. They also have a shorter, thicker neck, a much shorter bill and frequently fly in tighter flocks. Underwing is uniformly gray, unlike [[chough]]s. On the ground, jackdaws strut about briskly and have an upright posture.
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The Daurian jackdaw ''(C. dauricus)'' is about the same size or perhaps slightly smaller (32 centimeters in length), with the same proportions and identical habits. The principal difference is its plumage; many but not all adults of ''c. dauricus'' have large areas of creamy white on the lower parts, which extend up around the neck as a thick collar. The head, throat, wings, and tail are glossy black and the ear coverts are grizzled gray. Darker adults and young birds resemble Eurasian jackdaws, although Daurian jackdaws have a black iris, unlike the distinctive gray-white iris of the Eurasian jackdaw.
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==Distribution and habitat==
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Jackdaws ''(C. monedula)'' are resident over a large area stretching from North West Africa through virtually all of Europe, including the British Isles and southern Scandinavia, westwards through central Asia to the eastern Himalayas and [[Lake Baikal]]. They are resident throughout Turkey, the Caucasus, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and north-west India.
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The species has a large range, with an estimated global extent of between 1,000,000 and 10,000,000 km². It has a large global population, with an estimated 10 to 29 million individuals in Europe (BI 2008).
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Jackdaws are mostly resident, but the northern and eastern populations are more migratory (Offereins). Their range expands northwards into Russia to Siberia during summer, and retracts in winter (Mullarney et al. 1999). They are winter vagrants to Lebanon, first recorded there in 1962 (Ramadan-Jaradi et al. 2008). In Syria, they are winter vagrants and rare residents with some confirmed breeding (Murdoch and Betton 2008). The ''soemmerringii'' race occurs in south-central Siberia and extreme northwest China and is accidental to [[Hokkaido]], Japan (Brazil 2007).
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A small number of jackdaws reached the northwest of North America in the 1980s, presumably ship-assisted, and have been found from Atlantic Canada to Pennsylvania (Dunn and Alderfer 2006). They have also occurred as vagrants in Canada, the [[Faroe Islands]], [[Gibraltar]], Iceland, [[Mauritania]], and [[Saint Pierre and Miquelon]]. Jackdaws are regionally extinct in [[Malta]] and [[Tunisia]] (BI 2008).
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Jackdaws inhabit wooded [[steppe]]s, woodland, cultivated land, pasture, coastal cliffs, and villages and towns.
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==Behavior==
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Jackdaws are voluble birds. The call, frequently given in flight, is a metallic and somewhat squeaky, ''"chyak-chyak"'' or ''"kak-kak".'' Perched birds often chatter together, and before settling for the night large roosting flocks make a cackling noise. Jackdaws also have a hoarse, drawn-out alarm-call (Mullarney et al. 1999).
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Jackdaws are highly gregarious and are generally seen in small to large flocks. Flock sizes increase in autumn and large flocks group together at dusk for communal roosting (Mullarney et al. 1999). Jackdaws frequently congregate with the [[hooded crow]] ''(Corvus cornix)'' (Porter et al. 1996), and during migration often accompany [[rook (bird)|Rook]]s ''(C. frugilegus).''
  
The jackdaw (''C. monedula'') is one of the smallest species in the ''Corvus'' genus. ...
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Like [[magpies]], jackdaws are known to steal shiny objects such as jewelry to hoard in nests. [[John Gay]] in his ''[[Beggar's Opera]]'' notes that "A covetous fellow, like a jackdaw, steals what he was never made to enjoy, for the sake of hiding it" (Gay 1760) and in [[Tobias Smollett]]'s ''[[The Expedition of Humphry Clinker]]'' a scathing character assassination by Mr. Bramble runs "He is ungracious as a hog, greedy as a vulture, and thievish as a jackdaw" (Smollett 1857).
  
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===Feeding===
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The jackdaw mostly takes food from the ground but does take some food in trees. Like all [[corvid]]s, it is omnivorous.
  
(34–39&nbsp;[[centimetre|cm]] in length) in the [[genus]] of [[crow]]s and [[raven]]s. It is a black-plumaged bird with grey nape and distinctive white irises. Like all [[corvid]]s, it is omnivorous. It is found across Europe, western Asia and North Africa. Four subspecies are currently recognised.
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In terms of animal food, jackdaws tend to feed upon small [[invertebrate]]s found above ground between 2 and 18 millimeters (0.08-0.7 inches) in length, including imagines, larvae, and pupae of [[Curculionidae]], [[Coleoptera]], [[Diptera]], and [[Lepidoptera]]. [[Snail]]s, [[spider]]s, and some other insects also make up part of their animal diet. Unlike [[rook]]s and [[carrion crow]]s, jackdaws do not generally feed on carrion, though they will eat stranded fish on the shore.  
  
:It is the same size or perhaps slightly smaller (32 cm in length) than the latter species, with the same proportions and identical habits. The principal difference is its plumage; many but not all adults of this species have large areas of creamy white on the lower parts extending up around the neck as a thick collar. The head, throat, wings and tail are glossy black and the ear coverts are grizzled grey. Darker adults and young birds resemble Eurasian Jackdaws, though Daurian Jackdaws have a black iris, unlike the distinctive grey-white iris of the Eurasian Jackdaw.
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The plant diet of jackdaws consists of farm [[grain]]s ([[barley]], [[wheat]], and [[oat]]s), seeds of [[weed]]s, [[elderberry|elderberries]], [[acorn]]s, and various cultivated fruits (Lockie 1956).  
  
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Jackdaws also take scraps of human food in towns, and will more readily take food from bird tables than other ''Corvus'' species.
  
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Jackdaws employ various feeding methods, such as jumping, pecking, clod-turning and scattering, probing the soil, and rarely digging. Flies around cow dung (pats, flops) are caught by jumping from the ground or at times by dropping vertically from a few meters above onto the cow dung. Earthworms are not usually extracted from the ground by jackdaws but are eaten from freshly plowed soil (Lockie 1956).
  
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Jackdaws practice active food sharing, where the initiative for the transfer lies with the donor, with a number of individuals, regardless of sex and kinship. They also share more of a preferred food than a less preferred food (de Kort et al. 2006).
  
:Like other members of the Corvidae family ([[jay]]s, [[magpie]]s, [[treepie]]s and [[nutcracker (bird)|nutcrackers]]), members of the ''Corvus'' genus are characterized by strong feet and bills, feathered, rounded [[nostril]]s, strong tails and wings, rictal bristles, and a single [[molt]] each year (most [[passerine]]s molt twice). The genus ''Corvus'', including the crows, ravens, [[rook (bird)|rook]]s (''C. frugilegus''), and [[jackdaw]]s (''C. dauricus'' and ''C. monedula''), makes up over a third of the entire family.  
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Infant jackdaws are altricial and thus are completely dependent on being fed by their parents until they fledge (Emery et al. 2007).  
  
==Taxonomy==
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[[Image:Corvus monedula.jpg|right|thumb|In Poland in winter]]
The Jackdaw was one of the many species originally described by [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] in his 18th century work, ''[[Systema Naturae]]'', and it still bears its original name of ''Corvus monedula''.<ref>{{la icon}} {{cite book | last=Linnaeus | first=C | authorlink=Carolus Linnaeus | title=Systema naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis. Tomus I. Editio decima, reformata. | publisher=Holmiae. (Laurentii Salvii). | year=1758| pages=105 | quote = }}</ref> The species name ''monedula'' is the [[Latin]] for jackdaw.<ref>{{cite book | last = Simpson | first = D.P. | title = Cassell's Latin Dictionary | publisher = Cassell Ltd. | year = 1979 | edition = 5 | location = London | pages = 883 | id = ISBN 0-304-52257-0}}</ref>
 
  
The common name ''jackdaw'' first appears in the 16th century, and is a compound of the forename ''Jack'' used in animal names to signify a small form (e.g. jack-snipe) and the native English word ''daw''. Formerly jackdaws were simply called daws (the only form in Shakespeare). Claims that the metallic ''chyak'' call is the origin of the ''jack'' part of the common name<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.garden-birds.co.uk/birds/jackdaw.htm |title=British Garden Birds: Jackdaw}}</ref> are not supported by the ''[[Oxford English Dictionary]]''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50122724 |title=''Oxford English Dictionary'': Jackdaw. 2nd ed. 1989}}</ref>
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===Breeding===
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Males and females pair-bond for life and pairs stay together within flocks. They become sexually mature in the first breeding season, and there is little evidence for divorce or [[extra pair coupling]] in jackdaws, even after multiple instances of reproductive failure (Emery et al. 2007).  
  
''Daw'' is first attested in the 15th century, which the ''Oxford English Dictionary'' conjectures to be derived from an unattested [[Old English]] ''dawe'', citing [[cognate]]s in [[Old High German]] ''tâha'', [[Middle High German]] ''tâhe'' and modern German dialect ''dähi, däche, dacha''.
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Jackdaws usually nest in colonies with monogamous pairs collaborating to locate a nest site, which they then defend from other pairs and predators most of the year (Emery et al. 2007). They often nest close to [[rook (bird)|rooks]] (Gains 2008).
  
The original Old English name was ''ceo'' (pronounced with initial ch). Though now reserved for corvids of the genus ''Pyrrhocorax'' the word ''[[chough]]'' originally referred to the jackdaw.
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Jackdaws nest in cavities of trees, cliffs, or ruined, and sometimes inhabited, buildings, often in chimneys. They nest even in dense conifers. Jackdaws are famous for using church steeples for nesting, a fact reported in verse by [[William Cowper]] (1983):
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<blockquote>
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''A great frequenter of the church,''<br/>
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''Where, bishoplike, he finds a perch,''<br/>
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''And dormitory too.''
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</blockquote>
  
English dialect names are numerous. Scottish and north England dialect has had ''ka'' or ''kae'' since the 14th century. The midlands form of this was ''co'' or ''coo''. ''Caddow'' is potentially a compound of ''ka'' and ''dow'', a variant of ''daw''. Other dialect or obsolete names include ''caddesse'', ''cawdaw'', ''caddy'', ''chauk'', ''college-bird'' (from dialect ''college'' = cathedral), ''jackerdaw'', ''jacko'', ''ka-wattie'', ''chimney-sweep bird'', from their nesting propensities, and ''sea-crow'', from their frequenting coasts. It was also frequently known quasi-nominally as ''Jack''.<ref>Swan, H. Kirke. ''A Dictionary of English and Folk-Names of British Birds, With their History, Meaning and first usage: and the Folk-lore, Weather-lore, Legends, etc., relating to the more familiar species.'' London: Witherby and Co. 1913.</ref><ref>Wright, Joseph. ''The English Dialect Dictionary.'' Six volumes. London: Henry Frowde. 1898—1905.</ref><ref>Swainson, Charles. ''Provincial Names and Folk Lore of British Birds.'' London: Trübner and Co., 1885.</ref><ref name =Svensson>{{cite book | last = Mullarney | first = Killian | coauthors= Svensson, Lars; Zetterstrom, Dan; Grant, Peter |title = [[Collins Bird Guide]] | year = 1999 | pages = 335|publisher = Collins |isbn = 0002197286}}</ref>
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Gilbert White, in his popular book ''[[The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne|The Natural History of Selborne]],'' notes that jackdaws used to nest in crevices beneath the lintels of [[Stonehenge]], and describes a curious example of jackdaws using rabbit burrows for nest sites (White 1833).
  
An archaic [[collective noun]] for a group of jackdaws is a "clattering".<ref>First recorded in [[Lydgate]]'s ''Debate between the Horse, Goose and Sheep'', c.1430, as "A clatering of chowhis", and then in [[Juliana Berners]] ''[[Book of St. Albans]]'', c.1480, as "a Clateryng of choughes."</ref> Another term used is "train,"<ref name =white>White, Gilbert (1833) ''The Natural Nistory of Selborne.'' London: N. Hailes, p. 163.</ref> however, in practice, most people use the more generic term "flock".
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Nests are usually constructed by a mated pair blocking up the crevice by dropping sticks into it; the nest is then built atop the platform formed (Wilmore 1977). This behavior has led to blocked chimneys and even nests, with the jackdaw present, crashing down into fireplaces (Greenoak 1979). Nest platforms can attain great size: Neale (1846) notes that a "Clerk was allowed by the Churchwarden to have for his own use all that the caddows had brought into the Tower: and he took home, at one time, two cart-loads of good firewood, besides a great quantity of rubbish which he threw away." Nests are lined with hair, rags, bark, soil, and many other materials.  
  
===Subspecies===
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The [[Egg (biology)|egg]]s are smooth, glossy pale blue speckled with dark brown, measuring approximately 36 by 26 millimeters. Clutches of normally 4 to 5 eggs are incubated by the female for 17 to 18 days and fledge after 28 to 35 days, when they are fed by both parents (Gains 2008).  
There are four recognised subspecies<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.globaltwitcher.com/artspec.asp?thingid=26248 |title=GlobalTwitcher.com: Eurasian Jackdaw
 
Corvus monedula}}</ref><ref name =Svensson/>
 
* [[nominate]] ''C. m. monedula'' (Linnaeus, 1758) breeding in south-east Norway, southern Sweden and northern and eastern Denmark, with occasional wintering birds in England and France; has pale nape and side of the neck, dark throat, light grey partial collar of variable extent;
 
* ''C. m. spermologus'' (Vieillot, 1817) of west and central Europe, wintering to the Canary Islands and Corsica; darker in colour and lacks grey collar
 
* ''C. m. soemmerringii'' (Fischer, 1811) of north-east Europe, and north and central Asia, from former Soviet Union to Lake Baikal and north-west Mongolia and south to Turkey, Israel and the eastern Himalayas, and winters in Iran and NW India (Kashmir); distinguished by paler nape and side of the neck creating a contrasting black crown, and lighter grey partial collar;
 
* ''C. m. cirtensis'' (Rothschild and Hartert, 1912) of N Africa (Morocco and Algeria)
 
  
''C. m. Monedula'' integrates into ''C. m. soemmerringii'' with the transition zone running from Finland south across the Baltic, east Poland to Romania and Croatia.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.xs4all.nl/~calidris/jackdaw.htm |title=Identification and occurrence of "Eastern" Jackdaws in the Netherlands}}</ref>
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Jackdaws hatch asynchronously and incubation begins before clutch completion, often leading to the death of the last-hatched young. The young which die in the nest do so quickly which minimizes parental investment, and hence the brood size comes to fit the available food supply (Wingfield Gibbons 1987).  
  
==Description==
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===Social behavior===
[[Image:Corvus monedula fledgling 2.jpg|right|thumb|fledgling]]
 
Measuring 34–39&nbsp;[[centimetre|cm]] (14-15&nbsp;[[inch|in]]), the jackdaw is the smallest species in the genus ''Corvus''. Most of the plumage is black or greyish black except for the cheeks, nape and neck, which are light grey to greyish silver. The iris of adults is greyish white or silvery white, the only member of the genus outside of the [[Australasia]]n region to have this feature. The iris of juvenile jackdaws is light blue.
 
  
In flight, jackdaws are separable from other corvids by their smaller size, faster and deepers wingbeats and proportionately narrower and less fingered wings. They also have a shorter, thicker neck, a much shorter bill and frequently fly in tighter flocks. Underwing is uniformly grey, unlike [[chough]]s.
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The jackdaw is a highly sociable species outside of the breeding season, occurring in flocks that can contain hundreds of birds (Wilmore 1977).  
  
On the ground, jackdaws strut about briskly and have an upright posture.
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[[Konrad Lorenz]] studied the complex social interactions that occur in groups of jackdaws and published his detailed observations of their social behavior in his book ''[[King Solomon's Ring (nonfiction)|King Solomon's Ring]].'' To study jackdaws, Lorenz put colored rings on the legs of the jackdaws that lived around his house in [[Sankt Andrä-Wördern|Altenberg]], [[Austria]] for identification, and he caged them in the winter because of their annual [[Bird migration|migration]] away from Austria. His book describes his observations on jackdaws' [[Dominance hierarchy|hierarchical group structure]], in which the higher-ranking birds are dominant over lower ranked birds. The book also records his observations on jackdaws' strong male–female bonding; he noted that each bird of a pair both have about the same rank in the hierarchy, and that a low-ranked female jackdaw rocketed up the jackdaw social ladder when she became the mate of a high-ranking male.
  
Sexes and ages are alike.<ref>R.F. Porter, et al., ''Birds of the Middle East.'' Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996: 405.</ref><ref name =Svensson/>
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Jackdaws have been observed sharing food and objects. The active giving of food is rare in primates, and in birds is found mainly in the context of parental care and courtship. Jackdaws show much higher levels of active giving than documented for [[chimpanzee]]s. The function of this behavior is not fully understood, although it has been found to be compatible with hypotheses of mutualism, reciprocity, and harassment avoidance (v Bayern et al. 2005).
  
===Voice===
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Occasionally the flock makes "mercy killings" in which a sick or injured bird is mobbed until it is killed (Wilmore 1977).
Jackdaws are voluble birds. The call, frequently given in flight, is a metallic and somewhat squeaky, ''"chyak-chyak"'' or ''"kak-kak"''. Perched birds often chatter together, and before settling for the night large roosting flocks make a cackling noise. Jackdaws also have a hoarse, drawn-out alarm-call.<ref name =Svensson/>
 
  
==Distribution and habitat==
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==Taxonomy==
Jackdaws are resident over a large area stretching from North West Africa through virtually all of Europe, including the British Isles and southern Scandinavia, westwards through central Asia to the eastern Himalayas and [[Lake Baikal]]. They are resident throughout Turkey, the Caucasus, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and north-west India.  
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The jackdaw was one of the many species originally described by [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] in his eighteenth century work, ''[[Systema Naturae]],'' and it still bears its original name of ''Corvus monedula.'' The species name ''monedula'' is the [[Latin]] name for jackdaw (Simpson 1979).  
  
The species has a large range, with an estimated global extent of between 1,000,000 and 10,000,000 km². It has a large global population, with an estimated 10 to 29 million individuals in Europe.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/species/index.html?action=SpcHTMDetails.asp&sid=5758 |title=Birdlife International. Data Zone. Species factsheet: Corvus monedula. Downloaded 23/11/2008}}</ref>.  
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The common name ''jackdaw'' first appears in the sixteenth century and is a compound of the forename ''Jack'' used in animal names to signify a small form (e.g. jack-snipe) and the native English word ''daw.'' Formerly jackdaws were simply called daws (the only form in Shakespeare). Claims that the metallic ''chyak'' call is the origin of the ''jack'' part of the common name (Gains 2008) are not supported by the ''[[Oxford English Dictionary]]'' (Simpson and Weiner 1989).
  
Jackdaws are mostly resident, but the northern and eastern populations are more migratory.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.xs4all.nl/~calidris/jackdaw.htm |title=Identification and occurrence of "Eastern" Jackdaws in the Netherlands}}</ref> Their range expands northwards into Russia to Siberia during summer, and retracts in winter.<ref name =Svensson/> They are winter vagrants to Lebanon, first recorded there in 1962.<ref>Ghassan Ramadan-Jaradi, Thierry Bara and Mona Ramadan-Jaradi. "Revised checklist of the birds of Lebanon." ''Sandgrouse.'' 2008. 30(1):22-69.</ref> In Syria they are winter vagrants and rare residents with some confirmed breeding.<ref>D.A. Murdoch and K.F. Betton. "A checklist of the birds of Syria." ''Sandgrouse'': Supplement 2. 2008: 12.</ref> The ''soemmerringii'' race occurs in south-central Siberia and extreme northwest China and is accidental to [[Hokkaido]], Japan.<ref>Mark Brazil. ''The Birds of East Asia''. 2008.</ref>
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''Daw'' is first attested in the fifteenth century, which the ''Oxford English Dictionary'' conjectures to be derived from an unattested [[Old English]] ''dawe,'' citing [[cognate]]s in [[Old High German]] ''tâha,'' [[Middle High German]] ''tâhe'' and modern German dialect ''dähi, däche, dacha.''
  
A small number of Jackdaws reached the northwest of North America in the 1980s, presumedly ship-assisted, and have been found from Atlantic Canada to Pennsylvania.<ref>John L. Dunn and Jonanthan Alderfer, ''National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America.'' 5th ed. Washington, DC: National Geographic Society, 2006. p. 326</ref> They have also occurred as vagrants in Canada, the [[Faroe Islands]], [[Gibraltar]], Iceland, [[Mauritania]] and [[Saint Pierre and Miquelon]]. Jackdaws are regionally extinct in [[Malta]] and [[Tunisia]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/146641 |title=The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: Corvus monedula. Downloaded 23/11/2008}}</ref>
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The original Old English name was ''ceo'' (pronounced with initial ch). Though now reserved for corvids of the genus ''Pyrrhocorax,'' the word ''[[chough]]'' originally referred to the jackdaw.
  
They inhabit wooded [[steppe]]s, woodland, cultivated land, pasture, coastal cliffs and villages and towns.
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English dialect names are numerous. Scottish and north England dialect has had ''ka'' or ''kae'' since the fourteenth century. The midlands form of this was ''co'' or ''coo.'' ''Caddow'' is potentially a compound of ''ka'' and ''dow,'' a variant of ''daw.'' Other dialect or obsolete names include ''caddesse,'' ''cawdaw,'' ''caddy,'' ''chauk,'' ''college-bird'' (from dialect ''college'' = cathedral), ''jackerdaw,'' ''jacko,'' ''ka-wattie,'' ''chimney-sweep bird,'' from their nesting propensities, and ''sea-crow,'' from their frequenting coasts. It was also frequently known quasi-nominally as ''jack'' (Swan 1913; Wright 1905; Swainson 1885; Mullarney et al. 1999).  
  
==Behavior==
+
An archaic [[collective noun]] for a group of jackdaws is a "clattering." Another term used is "train" (White 1833); however, in practice, most people use the more generic term "flock."
Jackdaws are highly gregarious and are generally seen in small to large flocks, though males and females pair-bond for life and pairs stay together within flocks. Flock sizes increase in autmun and large flocks group together at dusk for communal roosting.<ref name =Svensson/> They become sexually mature in the first breeding season, and there is little evidence for divorce or [[extra pair coupling]] in jackdaws, even after multiple instances of reproductive failure.<ref name =emery>Nathan J Emery, Amanda M Seed, Auguste M.P von Bayern, and Nicola S Clayton. "Cognitive adaptations of social bonding in birds." ''Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London: B Biological Sciences.'' 2007 April 29; 362(1480): 489–505.</ref>
 
  
Jackdaws frequently congregate with [[Hooded Crow]] ''Corvus cornix'',<ref>R.F. Porter, et al., ''Birds of the Middle East.'' Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996: 405.</ref> and during migration often accompany [[rook (bird)|Rook]]s ''C. frugilegus''.
+
===Subspecies===
 +
There are four recognized subspecies (Strömberg 2008; Mullarney et al. 1999):
 +
* [[nominate]] ''C. m. monedula'' (Linnaeus, 1758) - breeding in south-east [[Norway]], southern [[Sweden]] and northern and eastern [[Denmark]], with occasional wintering birds in England and France; has pale nape and side of the neck, dark throat, light gray partial collar of variable extent;
 +
* ''C. m. spermologus'' (Vieillot, 1817) - of west and central Europe, wintering to the [[Canary Islands]] and [[Corsica]]; darker in color and lacks gray collar
 +
* ''C. m. soemmerringii'' (Fischer, 1811) - of north-east Europe, and north and central Asia, from former Soviet Union to [[Lake Baikal]] and north-west [[Mongolia]] and south to [[Turkey]], Israel and the eastern Himalayas, and winters in [[Iran]] and NW India ([[Kashmir]]); distinguished by paler nape and side of the neck creating a contrasting black crown, and lighter gray partial collar;
 +
* ''C. m. cirtensis'' (Rothschild and Hartert, 1912) - of North Africa ([[Morocco]] and [[Algeria]])
  
Like [[magpies]], jackdaws are known to steal shiny objects such as jewelry to hoard in nests. [[John Gay]] in his ''[[Beggar's Opera]]'' notes that "A covetous fellow, like a jackdaw, steals what he was never made to enjoy, for the sake of hiding it"<ref>John Gay. ''The Beggar's Opera.'' Edinburgh: A. Donaldson, 1760: 36.</ref> and in [[Tobias Smollett]]'s ''[[The Expedition of Humphry Clinker]]'' a scathing character assassination by Mr. Bramble runs "He is ungracious as a hog, greedy as a vulture, and thievish as a jackdaw."<ref>Tobias Smollett. ''Humphry Clinker.'' London: G. Routledge and Co., 1857: 78.</ref>
+
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
  
===Feeding===
+
==References==
The jackdaw mostly takes food from the ground but does take some food in trees.
 
  
In terms of animal food, jackdaws tend to feed upon small invertebrates found above ground between 2 and 18 mm in length, including imagines, larvae and pupae of [[Curculionidae]], [[Coleoptera]], [[Diptera]] and [[Lepidoptera]]. Snails, spiders and some other insects also make up part of their animal diet. Unlike [[rook]]s and [[carrion crow]]s, jackdaws do not generally feed on carrion, though they will eat stranded fish on the shore. The vegetal diet of jackdaws consists of farm grains (barley, wheat and oats), seeds of weeds, elderberries, acorns and various cultivated fruits.<ref name =lockie>J. D. Lockie "The Food and Feeding Behaviour of the Jackdaw, Rook and Carrion Crow." ''The Journal of Animal Ecology.'' 25:2 (Nov., 1956), pp. 421-428.</ref> Jackdaws also take scraps of human food in towns, and will more readily take food from bird tables than other ''Corvus'' species.
+
* BirdLife International (BI). 2008. [http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/146641 ''Corvus monedula''.] In IUCN, ''2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species''. Retrieved December 2, 2008.
  
Jackdaws employ various feeding methods, such as jumping, pecking, clod-turning and scattering, probing the soil, and rarely digging. Flies around cow pats are caught by jumping from the ground or at times by dropping vertically from a few metres above onto the cow pat. Earthworms are not usually extracted from the ground by jackdaws but are eaten from freshly plough soil.<ref name =lockie/>
+
* Brazil, M. 2007. ''Birds of East Asia.'' (Helm field guides.) London: Christopher Helm. ISBN 9780713670400.
  
Jackdaws practice active food sharing, where the initiative for the transfer lies with the donor, with a number of individuals, regardless of sex and kinship. They also share more of a preferred food than a less preferred food.<ref>Selvino R. de Kort, Nathan J. Emery and Nicola S. Clayton. "Food sharing in jackdaws, ''Corvus monedula'': what, why and with whom?" ''Animal Behaviour'' 72:2 (August 2006): 297-304.</ref>
+
* Cowper, W. 1853. ''The Poetical Works of Cowper.'' London: W. Pickering.
  
Infant jackdaws are altricial and thus are completely dependent on being fed by their parents until they fledge.<ref name =emery/>
+
* de Kort, S. R., N. J. Emery, and N. S. Clayton. 2006. Food sharing in jackdaws, ''Corvus monedula'': What, why and with whom?" ''Animal Behaviour'' 72(2): 297-304.
  
[[Image:Corvus monedula.jpg|left|thumb|In Poland in winter]]
+
* Dunn, J. L., and J. Alderfer. 2006. ''National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America,'' 5th ed. Washington, DC: National Geographic Society. ISBN 0792253140.
  
===Breeding===
+
* Emery, N. J., A. M. Seed, A. M. P. von Bayern, and N. S. Clayton. 2007. Cognitive adaptations of social bonding in birds. ''Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London: B Biological Sciences.'' 362(1480): 489–505.
Jackdaws usually nest in colonies with monogamous pairs collaborating to locate a nest site which they then defend from other pairs and predators most of the year.<ref name =emery/>
 
  
Jackdaws nest in cavities of trees, cliffs or ruined, and sometimes inhabited, buildings, often in chimneys, and even in dense conifers. They are famous for using church steeples for nesting, a fact reported in verse by [[William Cowper]]
+
* Gains, D. 2008. [http://www.garden-birds.co.uk/birds/jackdaw.htm Jackdaw]. ''British Garden Birds''. Retrieved December 2, 2008.  
<blockquote>
 
''A great frequenter of the church,''<br>
 
''Where, bishoplike, he finds a perch,''<br>
 
''And dormitory too.''<ref>''The Poetical Works of William Cowper.'' Vol. 2. London: William Pickering, 1853. p. 336.</ref>
 
</blockquote>
 
  
Nests are usually constructed by a mated pair blocking up the crevice by dropping sticks into it; the nest is then built atop the platform formed.<ref name =wilmore>Wilmore, S. Bruce. ''Crows, jays, ravens and their relatives.'' London: David and Charles Ltd, 1977</ref> This behaviour has led to blocked chimneys and even nests, with the jackdaw present, crashing down into fireplaces.<ref>Greenoak, F. ''All the birds of the air; the names, lore and literature of British birds.'' London: Book Club Associates, 1979</ref> Nest platforms can attain great size - John Mason Neale notes that a "Clerk was allowed by the Churchwarden to have for his own use all that the caddows had brought into the Tower: and he took home, at one time, two cart-loads of good firewood, besides a great quantity of rubbish which he threw away."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://anglicanhistory.org/neale/clerks.html |title=[John Mason Neale] ''A Few Words to Parish Clerks and Sextons of Country Parishes.'' London: Joseph Masters, 1846.}}</ref>
+
* Gay, J. 1760. ''The Beggar's Opera.'' Edinburgh: A. Donaldson.  
  
Gilbert White, in his popular book ''[[The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne|The Natural History of Selborne]]'', notes that jackdaws used to nest in crevices beneath the lintels of [[Stonehenge]], and describes a curious example of jackdaws using rabbit burrows for nest sites.<ref name =white/>
+
* Greenoak, F. 1979. ''All the Birds of the Air: The Names, Lore and Literature of British Birds.'' London: Book Club Associates. ISBN 0713648147.
  
Nests are lined with hair, rags, bark, soil, and many other materials. Jackdaws nest in colonies and often close to [[rook (bird)|rooks]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.garden-birds.co.uk/birds/jackdaw.htm |title=British Garden Birds: Jackdaw}}</ref> The [[Egg (biology)|egg]]s are smooth, glossy pale blue speckled with dark brown, measuring approximately 36 x 26 mm. Clutches of normally 4-5 eggs, are incubated by the female for 17-18 days and fledge after 28-35 days, when they are fed by both parents.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.garden-birds.co.uk/birds/jackdaw.htm |title=British Garden Birds: Jackdaw}}</ref>
+
* Lockie, J. D. 1956. The food and feeding behaviour of the jackdaw, rook and carrion crow. ''Journal of Animal Ecology'' 25(2): 421-428.  
  
Jackdaws hatch asynchronously and incubation begins before clutch completion, often leading to the death of the last-hatched young. The young which die in the nest do so quickly which minimises parental investment, and hence the brood size comes to fit the available food supply.<ref>David Wingfield Gibbons. 'Hatching Asynchrony Reduces Parental Investment in the Jackdaw.' ''Journal of Animal Ecology'' (1987) 53: 403-414.</ref>
+
* Mullarney, K., L. Svensson, D. Zetterstrom, and P. Grant. 1999. ''Collins Bird Guide.'' London: HarperCollins. ISBN 0002197286.  
  
===Social behavior===
+
* Murdoch, D. A., and K. F. Betton. 2008. A checklist of the birds of Syria. ''Sandgrouse'' Supplement 2: 12.
  
The jackdaw is a highly sociable species outside of the breeding season, occurring in flocks that can contain hundreds of birds.<ref name =wilmore/>
+
* Neale, J. M. 1846. [http://anglicanhistory.org/neale/clerks.html ''A Few Words to Parish Clerks and Sextons of Country Parishes'']. London: Joseph Masters. Retrieved December 2, 2008.
  
[[Konrad Lorenz]] studied the complex social interactions that occur in groups of jackdaws and published his detailed observations of their social behavior in his book ''[[King Solomon's Ring (nonfiction)|King Solomon's Ring]]''. To study jackdaws, Lorenz put coloured rings on the legs of the jackdaws that lived around his house in [[Sankt Andrä-Wördern|Altenberg]], [[Austria]] for identification, and he caged them in the winter because of their annual [[Bird migration|migration]] away from [[Austria]].  His book describes his observations on jackdaws' [[Dominance hierarchy|hierarchical group structure]], in which the higher-ranking birds are dominant over lower ranked birds.  The book also records his observations on jackdaws' strong male–female bonding; he noted that each bird of a pair both have about the same rank in the hierarchy, and that a low-ranked female jackdaw rocketed up the jackdaw social ladder when she became the mate of a high-ranking male.
+
* Offereins, O. R. n.d. [http://www.xs4all.nl/~calidris/jackdaw.htm Identification and occurrence of "Eastern" jackdaws in the Netherlands]. ''Rudy's Birding Page''. Retrieved December 2, 2008.
  
Jackdaws have been observed sharing food and objects. The active giving of food is rare in primates, and in birds is found mainly in the context of parental care and courtship. Jackdaws show much higher levels of active giving than documented for [[chimpanzee]]s. The function of this behaviour is not fully understood, although it has been found to be compatible with hypotheses of mutualism, reciprocity and harassment avoidance.<ref name="AMP v Bayern, SR de Kort, NS Clayton, NJ Emery
+
* Porter, R. F., S. Christensen, and P. Schiermacker-Hansen. 1996. ''Birds of the Middle East.'' London: Christopher Helm. ISBN 0713670169.
">''Frequent food- and object-sharing during jackdaw (Corvus monedula) socialisation'', [http://www.behav.org/IEC/default.php?proc=search&search=a_num&id=406].</ref>
 
  
Occasionally the flock makes 'mercy killings', in which a sick or injured bird is mobbed until it is killed.<ref name =wilmore/>
+
* Ramadan-Jaradi, G., T. Bara, and M. Ramadan-Jaradi. 2008. Revised checklist of the birds of Lebanon. ''Sandgrouse'' 30(1): 22-69.  
  
==Cultural depictions and folklore==
+
* Simpson, D. P. 1979. ''Cassell's Latin Dictionary.'' London: Cassell Ltd. ISBN 0304522570.  
*In some cultures, a jackdaw on the roof is said to predict a new arrival; alternatively, a jackdaw settling on the roof of a house or flying down a chimney is an omen of death and coming across one is considered a bad omen.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.oldsuperstitions.com/index.php?query=jackdaw&submit=Go |title=Old superstitions: Jackdaw}}</ref>
 
*A jackdaw standing on the vanes of a cathedral tower is meant to prognosticate rain. Czech superstition formerly held that if jackdaws are seen quarrelling, war will follow, and that jackdaws will not build nests at [[Sázava (Benešov District)|Sázava]] having been banished by [[Procopius of Sázava|Saint Procopius]].<ref>Swainson, Charles. ''Provincial Names and Folk Lore of British Birds.'' London: Trübner and Co., 1885.</ref>
 
*Ancient Greek authors tell how a jackdaw, being a social creature, may be caught with a dish of oil which it falls into while looking at its own reflection.<ref name=wentworth>D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson, ''A Glossary of Greek Birds.'' Oxford, 1895. p. 89.</ref>
 
*[[Pliny the Elder|Pliny]] notes how the [[Thessalian]]s, [[Illyrians]] and [[Lemnian]]s cherished jackdaws for destroying grasshoppers' eggs. The [[Veneti]] are fabled to have bribed the jackdaws to spare their crops.<ref name=wentworth/>
 
*An ancient Greek and Roman adage runs "The swans will sing when the jackdaws are silent" meaning that educated or wise people will speak after foolish prattlers finally run out of talk.<ref>''Collected Works of [[Erasmus]]: Adages: Ivi1 to Ix100.'' Translated by Roger A. Mynors. University of Toronto Press, 1989. p. 314.</ref>
 
*The sentence "Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz" is a commonly used example of a [[pangram]], (i.e. a sentence that contains all 26 letters of the [[English alphabet]]), while the sentence itself is only 31 letters long.<ref>[http://www.rinkworks.com/words/pangrams.shtml Fun with words]</ref>
 
  
==External links==
+
* Simpson, J. A., and E. S. C. Weiner. 1989. ''The Oxford English Dictionary.'' Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0198611862.
{{commons|Corvus monedula}}
 
* [http://ibc.hbw.com/ibc/phtml/especie.phtml?idEspecie=8270 Jackdaw videos] on the Internet Bird Collection
 
* [http://www.oiseaux.net/birds/photos/eurasian.jackdaw.html Oiseaux] Pictures
 
*[http://www.ibercajalav.net/img/412_JackdawCmonedula.pdf Ageing and sexing (PDF) by Javier Blasco-Zumeta]
 
*[http://www.myspace.com/jackvondaw]
 
  
==References==
+
* Smollett, T. 1857. ''Humphry Clinker.'' London: G. Routledge.
<!--This article uses the Cite.php citation mechanism. If you would like more information on how to add references to this article, please see http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Cite/Cite.php —>
 
  
 +
* Strömberg, N. 2008. [http://www.globaltwitcher.com/artspec.asp?thingid=26248 Eurasian jackdaw ''(Corvus monedula)'']. ''GlobalTwitcher''. Retrieved December 2, 2008.
  
* BirdLife International (BI). 2008. [http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/146641 ''Corvus monedula''.] In IUCN, ''2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species''. Retrieved December 2, 2008.
+
* Swainson, C. 1885. ''Provincial Names and Folk Lore of British Birds.'' London: Trübner.
  
 +
* Swan, H. K. 1913. ''A Dictionary of English and Folk-Names of British Birds, With their History, Meaning and First Usage: And the Folk-lore, Weather-lore, Legends, etc., Relating to the More Familiar Species.'' London: Witherby.
  
 +
* v Bayern, A. M. P., S. R. de Kort, N. S. Clayton, and N. J. Emery. 2005. [http://www.behav.org/IEC/default.php?proc=search&search=a_num&id=406 Frequent food- and object-sharing during jackdaw ''(Corvus monedula)'' socialisation]. ''XXIX Ethological Conference August 20-27, 2005. Budapest, Hungary''. Retrieved December 2, 2008.
  
{{reflist}}
+
* White, G. 1833. ''The Natural Nistory of Selborne.'' London: N. Hailes.
  
==Further reading==
+
* Wilmore, S. B. 1977. ''Crows, Jays, Ravens and Their Relatives.'' Newton Abbot, Eng.: David & Charles. ISBN 0715374281.
  
===Identification===
+
* Wingfield Gibbons, D. 1987. Hatching asynchrony reduces parental investment in the jackdaw. ''Journal of Animal Ecology'' 53: 403-414.
  
Harrop, Andrew (2000) Identification of Jackdaw forms in northwestern Europe ''[[Birding World]]'' vol. 13, no. 7 pages 290-295
+
* Wright, J. 1905. ''The English Dialect Dictionary.'' London: Henry Frowde.  
  
 
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Latest revision as of 01:52, 23 December 2008

Jackdaw
Dohle (Corvus monedula) d1.jpg
Conservation status
Status iucn3.1 LC.svg
Least Concern

(IUCN) [1]

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Corvidae
Genus: Corvus
Species: C. monedula
Binomial name
Corvus monedula
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Jackdaw range
Jackdaw range

Jackdaw is the common name for a gregarious Eurasian bird, Corvus monedula, one of the smallest species in the genus of crows and ravens, characterized by black plumage, a gray nape, and distinctive gray-white iris. It is found across Europe, western Asia, and North Africa. It is sometimes known as the Eurasian jackdaw, European jackdaw, Western jackdaw, or formerly simply the daw.

The term jackdaw also is used for another member of the Corvus genus, the Daurian jackdaw (Corvus dauricus), which is found in Siberia, Mongolia, and China. It is quite similar in appearance and habits to C. monedula, but the Daurian jackdaw has a black iris, and many of the Daurian jackdaws have large areas of creamy white on the lower parts, extending up around the neck. This article, however, will be limited to discussion of C. monedula.

Like the crows and ravens, the jackdaw in some cultures is sometimes considered a bad omen, such as an omen of death. However, jackdaws provide important functions. Ecologically, they play a role in food chains, consuming animal and plant matter and being consumed by foxes, cats, birds of prey, and various egg predators. For humans, the highly intelligent jackdaws have often been a focus of interest. Among interesting behaviors of jackdaws is the fact that they practice food sharing, where donors offer food to a number of individuals, even regardless of kinship, and they share their preferred food more readily than less preferred food. Such sharing of food and objects is rare even in primates and jackdaws show a much higher level of active giving than documented for chimpanzees.

Overview and description

fledgling

The Corvus genus in the Corvidae family incldues crows, ravens, rooks (one extant species, C. frugilegus), and jackdaws (two species, C. monedula and C. dauricus). These are large passerine birds that are characterized by strong feet and bills, feathered, rounded nostrils, strong tails and wings, rictal bristles, and a single molt each year (most passerines molt twice).

The jackdaw (C. monedula) is one of the smallest species in the Corvus genus, measuring 34 to 39 centimeters (13-15 inches) in length. Most of the plumage is black or grayish black except for the cheeks, nape, and neck, which are light gray to grayish silver. The iris of adults is grayish white or silvery white, the only member of the genus outside of the Australasian region to have this feature. The iris of juvenile jackdaws is light blue. Sexes and ages are alike (Porter et al. 1996; Mullarney et al. 1999).

In flight, jackdaws are separable from other corvids by their smaller size, faster and deeper wingbeats, and proportionately narrower and less fingered wings. They also have a shorter, thicker neck, a much shorter bill and frequently fly in tighter flocks. Underwing is uniformly gray, unlike choughs. On the ground, jackdaws strut about briskly and have an upright posture.

The Daurian jackdaw (C. dauricus) is about the same size or perhaps slightly smaller (32 centimeters in length), with the same proportions and identical habits. The principal difference is its plumage; many but not all adults of c. dauricus have large areas of creamy white on the lower parts, which extend up around the neck as a thick collar. The head, throat, wings, and tail are glossy black and the ear coverts are grizzled gray. Darker adults and young birds resemble Eurasian jackdaws, although Daurian jackdaws have a black iris, unlike the distinctive gray-white iris of the Eurasian jackdaw.

Distribution and habitat

Jackdaws (C. monedula) are resident over a large area stretching from North West Africa through virtually all of Europe, including the British Isles and southern Scandinavia, westwards through central Asia to the eastern Himalayas and Lake Baikal. They are resident throughout Turkey, the Caucasus, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and north-west India.

The species has a large range, with an estimated global extent of between 1,000,000 and 10,000,000 km². It has a large global population, with an estimated 10 to 29 million individuals in Europe (BI 2008).

Jackdaws are mostly resident, but the northern and eastern populations are more migratory (Offereins). Their range expands northwards into Russia to Siberia during summer, and retracts in winter (Mullarney et al. 1999). They are winter vagrants to Lebanon, first recorded there in 1962 (Ramadan-Jaradi et al. 2008). In Syria, they are winter vagrants and rare residents with some confirmed breeding (Murdoch and Betton 2008). The soemmerringii race occurs in south-central Siberia and extreme northwest China and is accidental to Hokkaido, Japan (Brazil 2007).

A small number of jackdaws reached the northwest of North America in the 1980s, presumably ship-assisted, and have been found from Atlantic Canada to Pennsylvania (Dunn and Alderfer 2006). They have also occurred as vagrants in Canada, the Faroe Islands, Gibraltar, Iceland, Mauritania, and Saint Pierre and Miquelon. Jackdaws are regionally extinct in Malta and Tunisia (BI 2008).

Jackdaws inhabit wooded steppes, woodland, cultivated land, pasture, coastal cliffs, and villages and towns.

Behavior

Jackdaws are voluble birds. The call, frequently given in flight, is a metallic and somewhat squeaky, "chyak-chyak" or "kak-kak". Perched birds often chatter together, and before settling for the night large roosting flocks make a cackling noise. Jackdaws also have a hoarse, drawn-out alarm-call (Mullarney et al. 1999).

Jackdaws are highly gregarious and are generally seen in small to large flocks. Flock sizes increase in autumn and large flocks group together at dusk for communal roosting (Mullarney et al. 1999). Jackdaws frequently congregate with the hooded crow (Corvus cornix) (Porter et al. 1996), and during migration often accompany Rooks (C. frugilegus).

Like magpies, jackdaws are known to steal shiny objects such as jewelry to hoard in nests. John Gay in his Beggar's Opera notes that "A covetous fellow, like a jackdaw, steals what he was never made to enjoy, for the sake of hiding it" (Gay 1760) and in Tobias Smollett's The Expedition of Humphry Clinker a scathing character assassination by Mr. Bramble runs "He is ungracious as a hog, greedy as a vulture, and thievish as a jackdaw" (Smollett 1857).

Feeding

The jackdaw mostly takes food from the ground but does take some food in trees. Like all corvids, it is omnivorous.

In terms of animal food, jackdaws tend to feed upon small invertebrates found above ground between 2 and 18 millimeters (0.08-0.7 inches) in length, including imagines, larvae, and pupae of Curculionidae, Coleoptera, Diptera, and Lepidoptera. Snails, spiders, and some other insects also make up part of their animal diet. Unlike rooks and carrion crows, jackdaws do not generally feed on carrion, though they will eat stranded fish on the shore.

The plant diet of jackdaws consists of farm grains (barley, wheat, and oats), seeds of weeds, elderberries, acorns, and various cultivated fruits (Lockie 1956).

Jackdaws also take scraps of human food in towns, and will more readily take food from bird tables than other Corvus species.

Jackdaws employ various feeding methods, such as jumping, pecking, clod-turning and scattering, probing the soil, and rarely digging. Flies around cow dung (pats, flops) are caught by jumping from the ground or at times by dropping vertically from a few meters above onto the cow dung. Earthworms are not usually extracted from the ground by jackdaws but are eaten from freshly plowed soil (Lockie 1956).

Jackdaws practice active food sharing, where the initiative for the transfer lies with the donor, with a number of individuals, regardless of sex and kinship. They also share more of a preferred food than a less preferred food (de Kort et al. 2006).

Infant jackdaws are altricial and thus are completely dependent on being fed by their parents until they fledge (Emery et al. 2007).

In Poland in winter

Breeding

Males and females pair-bond for life and pairs stay together within flocks. They become sexually mature in the first breeding season, and there is little evidence for divorce or extra pair coupling in jackdaws, even after multiple instances of reproductive failure (Emery et al. 2007).

Jackdaws usually nest in colonies with monogamous pairs collaborating to locate a nest site, which they then defend from other pairs and predators most of the year (Emery et al. 2007). They often nest close to rooks (Gains 2008).

Jackdaws nest in cavities of trees, cliffs, or ruined, and sometimes inhabited, buildings, often in chimneys. They nest even in dense conifers. Jackdaws are famous for using church steeples for nesting, a fact reported in verse by William Cowper (1983):

A great frequenter of the church,
Where, bishoplike, he finds a perch,
And dormitory too.

Gilbert White, in his popular book The Natural History of Selborne, notes that jackdaws used to nest in crevices beneath the lintels of Stonehenge, and describes a curious example of jackdaws using rabbit burrows for nest sites (White 1833).

Nests are usually constructed by a mated pair blocking up the crevice by dropping sticks into it; the nest is then built atop the platform formed (Wilmore 1977). This behavior has led to blocked chimneys and even nests, with the jackdaw present, crashing down into fireplaces (Greenoak 1979). Nest platforms can attain great size: Neale (1846) notes that a "Clerk was allowed by the Churchwarden to have for his own use all that the caddows had brought into the Tower: and he took home, at one time, two cart-loads of good firewood, besides a great quantity of rubbish which he threw away." Nests are lined with hair, rags, bark, soil, and many other materials.

The eggs are smooth, glossy pale blue speckled with dark brown, measuring approximately 36 by 26 millimeters. Clutches of normally 4 to 5 eggs are incubated by the female for 17 to 18 days and fledge after 28 to 35 days, when they are fed by both parents (Gains 2008).

Jackdaws hatch asynchronously and incubation begins before clutch completion, often leading to the death of the last-hatched young. The young which die in the nest do so quickly which minimizes parental investment, and hence the brood size comes to fit the available food supply (Wingfield Gibbons 1987).

Social behavior

The jackdaw is a highly sociable species outside of the breeding season, occurring in flocks that can contain hundreds of birds (Wilmore 1977).

Konrad Lorenz studied the complex social interactions that occur in groups of jackdaws and published his detailed observations of their social behavior in his book King Solomon's Ring. To study jackdaws, Lorenz put colored rings on the legs of the jackdaws that lived around his house in Altenberg, Austria for identification, and he caged them in the winter because of their annual migration away from Austria. His book describes his observations on jackdaws' hierarchical group structure, in which the higher-ranking birds are dominant over lower ranked birds. The book also records his observations on jackdaws' strong male–female bonding; he noted that each bird of a pair both have about the same rank in the hierarchy, and that a low-ranked female jackdaw rocketed up the jackdaw social ladder when she became the mate of a high-ranking male.

Jackdaws have been observed sharing food and objects. The active giving of food is rare in primates, and in birds is found mainly in the context of parental care and courtship. Jackdaws show much higher levels of active giving than documented for chimpanzees. The function of this behavior is not fully understood, although it has been found to be compatible with hypotheses of mutualism, reciprocity, and harassment avoidance (v Bayern et al. 2005).

Occasionally the flock makes "mercy killings" in which a sick or injured bird is mobbed until it is killed (Wilmore 1977).

Taxonomy

The jackdaw was one of the many species originally described by Linnaeus in his eighteenth century work, Systema Naturae, and it still bears its original name of Corvus monedula. The species name monedula is the Latin name for jackdaw (Simpson 1979).

The common name jackdaw first appears in the sixteenth century and is a compound of the forename Jack used in animal names to signify a small form (e.g. jack-snipe) and the native English word daw. Formerly jackdaws were simply called daws (the only form in Shakespeare). Claims that the metallic chyak call is the origin of the jack part of the common name (Gains 2008) are not supported by the Oxford English Dictionary (Simpson and Weiner 1989).

Daw is first attested in the fifteenth century, which the Oxford English Dictionary conjectures to be derived from an unattested Old English dawe, citing cognates in Old High German tâha, Middle High German tâhe and modern German dialect dähi, däche, dacha.

The original Old English name was ceo (pronounced with initial ch). Though now reserved for corvids of the genus Pyrrhocorax, the word chough originally referred to the jackdaw.

English dialect names are numerous. Scottish and north England dialect has had ka or kae since the fourteenth century. The midlands form of this was co or coo. Caddow is potentially a compound of ka and dow, a variant of daw. Other dialect or obsolete names include caddesse, cawdaw, caddy, chauk, college-bird (from dialect college = cathedral), jackerdaw, jacko, ka-wattie, chimney-sweep bird, from their nesting propensities, and sea-crow, from their frequenting coasts. It was also frequently known quasi-nominally as jack (Swan 1913; Wright 1905; Swainson 1885; Mullarney et al. 1999).

An archaic collective noun for a group of jackdaws is a "clattering." Another term used is "train" (White 1833); however, in practice, most people use the more generic term "flock."

Subspecies

There are four recognized subspecies (Strömberg 2008; Mullarney et al. 1999):

  • nominate C. m. monedula (Linnaeus, 1758) - breeding in south-east Norway, southern Sweden and northern and eastern Denmark, with occasional wintering birds in England and France; has pale nape and side of the neck, dark throat, light gray partial collar of variable extent;
  • C. m. spermologus (Vieillot, 1817) - of west and central Europe, wintering to the Canary Islands and Corsica; darker in color and lacks gray collar
  • C. m. soemmerringii (Fischer, 1811) - of north-east Europe, and north and central Asia, from former Soviet Union to Lake Baikal and north-west Mongolia and south to Turkey, Israel and the eastern Himalayas, and winters in Iran and NW India (Kashmir); distinguished by paler nape and side of the neck creating a contrasting black crown, and lighter gray partial collar;
  • C. m. cirtensis (Rothschild and Hartert, 1912) - of North Africa (Morocco and Algeria)

Notes

  1. BirdLife International, "Corvus monedula," In 2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (IUCN, 2008). Retrieved December 2, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • BirdLife International (BI). 2008. Corvus monedula. In IUCN, 2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved December 2, 2008.
  • Brazil, M. 2007. Birds of East Asia. (Helm field guides.) London: Christopher Helm. ISBN 9780713670400.
  • Cowper, W. 1853. The Poetical Works of Cowper. London: W. Pickering.
  • de Kort, S. R., N. J. Emery, and N. S. Clayton. 2006. Food sharing in jackdaws, Corvus monedula: What, why and with whom?" Animal Behaviour 72(2): 297-304.
  • Dunn, J. L., and J. Alderfer. 2006. National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America, 5th ed. Washington, DC: National Geographic Society. ISBN 0792253140.
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  • Gains, D. 2008. Jackdaw. British Garden Birds. Retrieved December 2, 2008.
  • Gay, J. 1760. The Beggar's Opera. Edinburgh: A. Donaldson.
  • Greenoak, F. 1979. All the Birds of the Air: The Names, Lore and Literature of British Birds. London: Book Club Associates. ISBN 0713648147.
  • Lockie, J. D. 1956. The food and feeding behaviour of the jackdaw, rook and carrion crow. Journal of Animal Ecology 25(2): 421-428.
  • Mullarney, K., L. Svensson, D. Zetterstrom, and P. Grant. 1999. Collins Bird Guide. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 0002197286.
  • Murdoch, D. A., and K. F. Betton. 2008. A checklist of the birds of Syria. Sandgrouse Supplement 2: 12.
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  • Ramadan-Jaradi, G., T. Bara, and M. Ramadan-Jaradi. 2008. Revised checklist of the birds of Lebanon. Sandgrouse 30(1): 22-69.
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  • Simpson, J. A., and E. S. C. Weiner. 1989. The Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0198611862.
  • Smollett, T. 1857. Humphry Clinker. London: G. Routledge.
  • Swainson, C. 1885. Provincial Names and Folk Lore of British Birds. London: Trübner.
  • Swan, H. K. 1913. A Dictionary of English and Folk-Names of British Birds, With their History, Meaning and First Usage: And the Folk-lore, Weather-lore, Legends, etc., Relating to the More Familiar Species. London: Witherby.
  • White, G. 1833. The Natural Nistory of Selborne. London: N. Hailes.
  • Wilmore, S. B. 1977. Crows, Jays, Ravens and Their Relatives. Newton Abbot, Eng.: David & Charles. ISBN 0715374281.
  • Wingfield Gibbons, D. 1987. Hatching asynchrony reduces parental investment in the jackdaw. Journal of Animal Ecology 53: 403-414.
  • Wright, J. 1905. The English Dialect Dictionary. London: Henry Frowde.

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