Artificial-nest experiments conducted near Juneau, Alaska, indicated that S
teller's jays (Cyanocitta stelleri) may undergo a marked shift in foraging
pattern and possibly nest-predation behavior triggered by fledging of their
own chicks. In an early-June sampling of predation on artificial nests con
taining quail eggs, egg losses and jay activity levels were significantly h
igher in forest adjacent to human-created edge than in undisturbed interior
forest. In a late-June sampling, however, nest predation near edges was si
gnificantly reduced, and this was correlated with a drop in jay activity (d
etected via predator censuses and remote-controlled camera stations baited
with artificial nests). Steller's jays in natural nests monitored during th
e study fledged their chicks between the two samplings, which suggests that
quail eggs were an important food for jays during their nestling period (e
arly June) but not after (late June). Nests in the two plots in interior fo
rest, where jays were rarely detected, had consistently low nest predation
rates in both samplings. These data support the hypothesis that during thei
r nestling period, adult Steller's jays in southeast Alaska may prey intens
ively on the contents of other birds' nests in the vicinity of their own ne
sts, but that fledging of jay chicks abruptly changes foraging patterns, in
cluding possibly reducing nest-predation behavior. Given the short breeding
season in southeast Alaska, it is likely that during the postfledging peri
od, jay families concentrate on obtaining foods (e.g., conifer seeds) that
are more important for over-winter survival of the juveniles than nest cont
ents, which decrease rapidly in abundance during July.