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Range
Northwestern
Crow is resident along the Pacific coast from south-coastal and
southeastern Alaska south through British Columbia west of the Coast
Mountains and Cascade Mountains, to northwestern Washington, including
the Queen Charlotte Islands, Vancouver Island, and all other coastal
islands.
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Status
Fairly common to common summer resident
along the coast. Throughout the rest of the year a common to very
common resident in the Georgia Depression Ecoprovince, including
the Sunshine Coast, Gulf Islands, and southeastern Vancouver Island;
fairly common to common resident on Western Vancouver Island, the
Southern and Northern Mainland Coast, and the Queen Charlotte Islands,
in the Coast and Mountains Ecoprovince. Locally abundant to very
abundant from late summer through early spring in the vicinity of
nocturnal roosts, particularly in the Georgia Depression. |
Status
Change
No change. |
Nonbreeding
The
Northwestern Crow occurs along the length of the British Columbia
coastline, including Vancouver Island and the Queen Charlotte Islands.
Numbers dwindle rapidly with increasing elevation and distance from
the sea.
The absence of records from the northern
Boundary Ranges of British Columbia confirms evidence from the Alaskan
southeast (Swarth 1922; Gabrielson and Lincoln 1959) that this crow,
at the northern end of its range in regions with intact natural
habitats, does not normally occur more than a few kilometres from
tidewater. A notable exception to this coastwise concentration occurs
when spawning runs of fish enter the large rivers and the Northwestern
Crow follows the food source as much as 120 km upriver (W. Prescott
pers. comm.). This is especially notable on the Fraser, Skeena and
Nass rivers.
Although the Northwestern Crow is widespread
along the coast, its centre of abundance is in the Georgia Depression,
including the southeast coast of Vancouver Island and the lower
Fraser River valley.
The Northwestern Crow occurs at elevations
from sea level to 1,700 m, but it is most numerous at lower elevations.
Although it frequents a wide range of natural and human-influenced
habitats, it is closely linked to marine shorelines, where it forages
much of the time. Thus, shallow marine shores with interspersed
rocky headlands, boulder beaches, and sand, gravel or mudflats are
the primary feeding grounds of this crow. It occurs infrequently
or is absent from the sheer rock margins of the many fiords that
characterize the mainland coast. There the steep, rocky shorelines
plunge directly into deep water, providing few foraging opportunities
for this bird. Moreover, the surface water of these inlets is low
in salinity, and the shore fauna of invertebrates, on which the
crow feeds, lacks variety. Tidal estuaries at the heads of the fiords
normally support a small population of crows.
The availability of exposed intertidal
areas to crows varies with the season. During the winter months,
the lowest tides, and therefore the richest feeding habitats, occur
at night; during the spring and summer, low tides occur during daylight
hours. This crow responds by changing foraging practices with the
seasons and concentrating more on human-altered habitats when the
beaches are less available. At such times, the tameness of the Northwestern
Crow becomes notable as it forages on lawns, roadsides, parking
lots, ferry wharfs, marinas, refuse piles, garbage landfills and
similar areas.
It adapts easily to the environmental
changes imposed by people and, during the non-breeding parts of
the year, is now more abundant around towns and villages than in
its natural environment. Deforestation has helped increase crow
populations in some areas. Habitats now include farm fields, pastures,
playgrounds, residential neighbourhoods, golf courses, cemeteries
and bush camps. Farm fields sown with corn and grains are favoured
after the harvest. Garbage landfills have been particularly important
in providing a winter food source. This close association with humans
and the attendant ease of acquiring food, particularly through the
winter months, has likely contributed to the increase in the populations
of the Northwestern Crow in urban areas. An analysis of Christmas
Bird Counts for the period 1975 to 1994 in select areas of southwestern
coastal British Columbia indicates that the larger cities attract
more crows in winter than do smaller cities and rural sites, and
that agricultural areas are also important foraging sites, where
this crow uses seasonally available food sources such as fruit and
grain.
The Northwestern Crow is not normally
considered migratory in British Columbia, but local movements appear
to be widespread. Birds move from exposed coasts to more protected
areas in autumn. With the coming of spring, winter flocks disperse,
and areas of coastline that were almost without crows during the
winter receive their courting pairs. Total numbers of crows reported
from the Georgia Depression illustrate this point. They average
about 30,000 birds from September through March, then drop to an
average of about 7,000 birds from April through August. This difference
can be only partly attributed to flocking behaviour during the non-breeding
season. Pearse (in Bent 1946) reports evidence of movements to farmlands
on eastern Vancouver Island from the lightly inhabited mainland
coast.
Behaviour
important to the Northwestern Crow during the non-breeding season
is its congregation into large flocks that move between feeding
areas and roosting sites. Of 608 records consisting of 100 or more
birds (excluding Christmas Bird Counts or other such surveys), 87%
were reported from September through March. In most areas, local
movements occur twice daily: once at dawn, when the entire population
of the roost leaves for foraging areas, and again in late afternoon,
as the crows muster in noisy flocks to assemble at the roost sites
for the night.
On the south coast, some of these movements
are spectacular, with birds streaming by in flocks of hundreds or,
occasionally, thousands. For example, in March 1988, 2,071 crows
were counted arriving at a roost on Sidney Island between 1810 and
1859 hours. Twenty-one flocks were counted. They ranged in size
from 6 to 460 birds, with an average of 99 birds per flock; average
time between flocks was 2.4 minutes (R.W. Butler pers. comm.).
Some of the largest known roosts are
on Chatham Island, James Island, Grouse Mountain, Douglas Island
(Port Coquitlam), Burns Bog and Burnaby, but there are many local
roosts occupied by smaller numbers of crows. The roosts are usually
situated in undisturbed areas of large, old conifers, sometimes
interspersed with arbutus, Garry oak, and bigleaf maple. Frequently
they are on islands away from human activity. Little is known about
the characteristics of these traditional roosts sites, or of their
role in the biology of the Northwestern Crow. Northern populations
have not been reported flocking in such numbers.
The Northwestern Crow is present throughout
the year in British Columbia. |
Breeding
The
Northwestern Crow has a widespread breeding distribution along the
British Columbia coast from southern Vancouver Island north to at
least the Queen Charlotte Islands and Portland Inlet. Its eastward
breeding distribution is imperfectly known but reaches at least
to Chilliwack in the Georgia Depression and to Kitimat on the Northern
Mainland Coast. Most birds nest within a few kilometres of the sea.
In summer, as in winter, its highest
numbers are in the Georgia Basin. An analysis of Breeding Bird Surveys
for the Northwestern Crow in British Columbia shows that the mean
number of birds on coastal routes increased at an average rate of
2% over the period 1968 through 1993.
This species has been reported breeding
from near sea level to 510 m elevation. Much of the coastline of
British Columbia is margined by coniferous forests with a varied
understorey of berry-producing shrubs. Where the coastal strip of
forest has not been removed by clearcut logging, it provides nesting
and roosting sites for this crow close to the foraging area of the
beach. Nesting sites are usually near a forest edge that supports
many smaller trees and tall shrubs. Other nesting habitats include
estuaries, river valleys, lakeshores, offshore islands, marshes
and sloughs.
The population of crows nesting within
cities is increasing, but often goes unnoticed except perhaps for
the early morning, prelaying, courtship-begging of females. As nesting
proceeds, however, some crows begin to harass passers-by, occasionally
making contact with them, usually about the head. Once the young
are off the nest and begin their raucous begging for food throughout
the day, they seldom go unnoticed. Autumn leaf-fall exposes the
crow nests, which can be seen even in boulevard trees no more than
3 m high.
In selecting its nesting territory, the
Northwestern Crow tends to avoid extensive areas of dense forest
far removed from the ocean. Nesting habitat includes the hundreds
of small rocky islets scattered along the coast. Many of these support
nesting colonies of marine birds and feature a lush vegetation of
fortes, bulbous plants, grasses, stunted crab apple, elderberry,
salmonberry, snowberry, spirea, Pacific ninebark and even a few
wind-wracked conifers. On these islands and islets, the Northwestern
Crow frequently nests in low shrubs or on the ground.
The Northwestern Crow has been recorded
breeding in British Columbia from 23 March (calculated) to 24 July.
Colonies: Colonial nesting has been reported
for this species (Bent 1946). In British Columbia, groups of 2 to
19 nesting pairs occurring on small islands and along hedgerows
and boulevard trees have been referred to as colonies. However,
we do not consider this species to be a colonial nester in British
Columbia.
On Mitlenatch and Mandarte islands, each
pair defends a territory of about 0.5 ha in which the nest is situated
(R.W. Butler pers. comm.); 22% of the breeding pairs are assisted
by yearlings in defending the territory (Verbeek and Butler 1981). |
| Nests: 
Most
nests (64%; n = 391) were found in trees, both coniferous
(31%) and deciduous (18%). The most often used conifers were Douglas-fir
(11%), Sitka spruce (10%), and lodgepole pine (4%), followed by
Western red-cedar, hemlock, and grand fir. Pacific crab apple (5%)
and bitter cherry (4%) were the most often used deciduous trees,
followed by willow, red alder, black cottonwood, arbutus, maple,
Pacific dogwood and Garry oak. On rocky island sites, where trees
were scarce or absent, nesting in shrubs (16%) or on the ground
(14%;) was commonplace, a behaviour first reported by Darcus (1930).
Shrubs included saskatoon (4%), Pacific ninebark (2%), willow, Nootka
rose, thimbleberry and elderberry. In addition, virtually every
other local species of native tree and shrub was reported to have
harboured a nest.
Where the nest situation was described,
most nests (63%; n = 269) were found among the branches
of trees or shrubs. Nests in conifers were often saddled on the
branches, sometimes close to the trunk. In deciduous trees and shrubs
the nests were almost always placed among the branches well away
from the trunk. Ground nests were found under or among ground cover
(10%), beneath a log or rock, on rocky ledges, in a rock crevice,
or among the lower branches of shrubs.
The bulky nests were composed primarily
of twigs, sticks, and small branches. Nests were lined mainly with
bark strips, followed by grasses, moss, feathers, fine rootless,
plant fibres and sometimes hair or human-made items such as paper,
rope, fiberglass insulation and mattress filling. On Mitlenatch
Island, all nests were lined with cedar bark strips even though
no cedars grew on the island (Butler 1980).
The heights of 372 nests ranged from
ground level to 45 m, with 59% between 1.2 and 8 m.
Eggs:
Dates for 270 clutches ranged from 27
March to 8 July, with 52% recorded between 2 and 26 May. Calculated
dates indicate that eggs can occur as early as 23 March. Sizes of
241 clutches ranged from 1 to 6 eggs (1E-10, 2E-19, 3E-46, 4E-98,
5E-63, 6E-5), with 67% having 4 or 5 eggs. In a sample of 187 clutches
from Mandarte and Mitlenatch islands, 54% contained 4 eggs (Richardson
et al. 1985). On Mitlenatch Island, the mean incubation period from
the day the last egg was laid until all were hatched was 18.3 +
0.85 days (n = 19) (Butler et al. 1984).
Nest
Success:
Of
28 nests found with eggs and followed to a known fate, 16 produced
at least 1 fledgling, for a success rate of 57%. On Mandarte and
Mitlenatch islands, 79% of nests fledged at least 1 young (Butler
et al. 1984). On the same islands, Richardson et al. (1985) found
that the proportion of young that survived from hatching to fledging
was 67% and 37%, respectively. Clutches of 3,4, and 5 eggs fledged
an average of 0.98, 1.22, and 1.20 young, respectively; 51% of the
nestlings died within 7 days of hatching, and starvation appeared
to be the predominant cause of death.
Young: Dates for 174 broods ranged from
10 April to 24 July, with 53% recorded between 25 May and 20 June.
Sizes of 148 broods ranged from 1 to 6 young (1Y-29, 2Y-49,3Y-43,4Y-23,5Y-3,6Y-1),
with 62% having 2 or 3 young. The nestling period was reported as
32 + 2.5 days (n = 20) on Mandarte Island and 26 + 3.4
days (n = 55) on Mitlenatch Island; the earlier departure
in the latter case may have been induced by observer disturbance
(Butler et al. 1984). |
Remarks
Opposing views have been expressed regarding
the systematic status of the two crows in British Columbia. The
American Ornithologists' Union (1983) notes that the Northwestern
Crow and American Crow are closely related and are considered nonspecific
by some authors (Johnston 1961; American Ornithologists' Union 1983;
Sibley and Monroe 1990).
Difficulties in field identification
of the two species make it impossible to determine, under field
conditions, the precise areas of overlap in their distribution (see
American Crow). On the basis of specimens collected and possible
differences in call notes, the Northwestern Crow is thought to occur
exclusively west of the coastal mountains, and the American Crow
east of the mountains. However, numerous potential zones of contact
are available along major river systems such as the Fraser, Skeena,
Nass and Stikine, or along highway corridors. We have deliberately
excluded observational reports from these areas, because of the
uncertainty of identification. All coastal records of American Crow
and all interior records of Northwestern Crow that are not supported
by specimens have been excluded.Any interior reports of Northwestern
Crow should be treated cautiously, pending further research.
The Northwestern Crow may be highly philopatric.
With the exception of one report of a crow banded near Comox on
11 June 1979 and recovered north of Victoria on 26 November 1980,
all recoveries (n = 38) of the Northwestern Crow were from the banding
location, some after a number of years had passed. For example,
a bird banded near Campbell River on 22 June 1969 was recovered
there in January 1981, nearly 12 years later; another, banded in
the same area on 3 June 1977 was recovered there over 7 years later,
on 15 November 1984.
The
Northwestern Crow is a major predator and scavenger on coastal seabird
colonies. On Mandarte Island, for example, it is a major predator
upon the eggs of cormorants, the Glaucous-winged Gull and the Pigeon
Guillemot. There it consumes 22% of all eggs laid in the first clutches
of Double-crested and Pelagic cormorants (Verbeek 1982), and also
preys on the newly hatched young of the cormorants (Butler et al.
1985).
The disturbance caused by people landing
among the cormorant nesting colonies results in the parent birds
leaving the nests unprotected. The nests are then raided by the
crows. Thus the number of fledglings produced by a colony is strongly
influenced by the frequency of human disturbance at the colonies.
Even a single landing party a week can result in many cormorant
nests failing to produce fledglings. On islands with burrow-nesting
seabirds, crows not only scavenge food droppings but also prey on
the nestlings as they emerge from their burrows (Butler et al. 1985).
The Northwestern Crow frequently preys upon the eggs and nestlings
of many species of small birds.
Old nests of the Northwestern Crow are
used as nest sites by several species of birds. In British Columbia,
the Great Horned Owl, Merlin and Long-eared Owl have been documented
nesting in them.
British Columbia probably supports most
of the world's population of Northwestern Crows.
Although considered wildlife under the
British Columbia Wildlife Act, Northwestern Crows are afforded no
protection from shooting for much the same reasons discussed under
American Crow.
For additional information on the biology
and behaviour of the Northwestern Crow, see Butler (1974, 1980),
Verbeek and Butler (1981), Butler et al. (1984), and Richardson
et al. (1985). |
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