Mexican Jay
The Aphelocoma wollweberi, popularly known as the Mexican Jaybird, is a medium-sized bird native to North and Central America. It's a New World Jay, which means it's a bird from the New World. It eats acorns and pine nuts mostly but also eats a variety of other plant and animal foods. It has a cooperative breeding system in which both the males and females raise their young birds. This bird's plumage is a stunning combination of blue, white, and grey. The gray-breasted jay is another name for this bird. The Mexican jaybird's upper plumage, head, wings, back, and tail are all blue, while the breasts are grayish and the belly area is white.
In terms of plumage color, body size, and wingspan, females differ significantly from males. In comparison to male Mexican Jaybirds, females are paler, duller, and shorter. They can be found in the majority of the woodlands and farmlands that run between North and Central America.