Abstract

Habitat preferences in animals are often examined during the breeding period when individuals are easier to observe. However, habitat use may change once young become independent and if resource availability shifts with seasonality. While Canada Jays ( Perisoreus canadensis (Linnaeus, 1766)) in Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada, have been studied for several decades, there is no information on habitat use outside of the fall and late-winter nesting period, where they primarily used conifer forests. Using radio telemetry and resource selection functions comparing used versus available habitats, we estimated home-range size and habitat preferences of 12 adult Canada Jays ( n = 334 locations) in the spring and summer. Mean (±SD) home-range size from minimum convex polygons was 84 (±48 ha) and ranged from 35 to 201 ha. Canada Jays strongly preferred forest–wetland edges, showed a weak preference for coniferous forests, a corresponding weak avoidance of shade-tolerant hardwood forests, and used mixed forest and wetlands in proportion to their availability. Our results suggest that, while adult Canada Jays use multiple types of habitat during the post-breeding period, they also key into forest–wetland edges, likely to take advantage of emergent prey while remaining near forested areas to maximize protection from predators.

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