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Climate Change Spurs Rare Hybrid Between Blue Jay and Green Jay
mardi 30 septembre 2025, 05:30 , par Slashdot/Apple
![]() Avid birders across Central Texas have taken note, sharing sightings of the emerald birds on social media and apps like eBird. Keitt, a professor of integrative biology at UT Austin, has been keeping tabs on their rapid northward creep since 2018. 'They're pretty unmistakable in the field,' he told CNN. 'You see a green jay and you absolutely know that it's a green jay.' Stokes joined Keitt's project a few years later, trapping birds to take blood samples for genetic analysis and releasing them back into the wild. While monitoring social media for green jay sightings in May 2023, Stokes came across an intriguing post on a Facebook group called Texbirds. A woman in a suburb of San Antonio shared a photo of an unusual bird that didn't look like any jay Stokes or Keitt had ever seen. 'He happened to notice that this person posted a picture of this odd jay, and immediately told me, and we got in the car and drove down to find it right away,' Keitt said. He and Stokes described their finding as one of the 'increasingly unexpected outcomes' that arise when global warming and land development converge to drive animal populations to new habitat ranges. This, they wrote, can lead to unpredictable animal interactions -- in this case, between a tropical species and a temperate one -- and create never-before-seen ecological communities. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/09/30/000219/climate-change-spurs-rare-hybrid-between-blue-jay...
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