I live a few houses off of S. University Blvd in Centennial. I work a few 
streets off of S. University Blvd. at DU. 

In my six years of making this commute, which is not much longer by car or 
bus than by the flight of a crow, I've grown accustomed to seeing a single 
magpie fly over University, just south of S. Hampden Blvd. (I saw one this 
morning, which precipitated this post.)

Then the species disappears, until (roughly) City Park in Denver. Crows can 
be found at the King Soopers on University, just north of Hampden -- as 
well as at the hot spots between Hampden and City Park. So, too, can Blue 
Jays. 

But there's a relative dearth of magpies for about 6 miles along University.

Of course, they're not entirely absent -- only relatively so. But they're 
by no means common along this stretch.

At both Wash Park and the Botanic Gardens, they're often not reported, and 
they appear on fewer than 10% of checklists at both spots. I remember 
seeing them at Denver Botanic Gardens once in my time birding there. (eBird 
tells me I've submitted 198 complete checklists to the gardens.) I also 
distinctly remember another member of their family -- I can't remember if 
it was a Blue Jay or a Crow, though I think the latter -- escorting them 
out of the area.

By contrast, at deKoevend Park, which University borders in Centennial, 
you'll (almost) always see magpies. It's the same at City Park. At both 
places, Magpies are reported on roughly 40-100% of checklists at both 
spots, on a week by week basis. (deKoevend has some weeks of very few 
checklists, so there are weeks where there are no magpies reported.) 

It's always struck me as a bit curious, though I'm sure the magpies have 
their reasons. Maybe it has to do with the density of human buildings and 
the extensiveness of "undeveloped" spaces." But it still seems odd to me 
that both larger and smaller corvids, crows and jays, are at home in areas 
that mapgies avoid.

None of the three species seem to have changed their breeding range all 
that much between the two Breeding Bird Atlases, though mapgies had the 
largest decline in confirmed breeding of the three species. (Most of that 
decline seems to have happened along the eastern edge of the state.)

*What's in a name?*

The scientific name of the Black-billed Magpie is *Pica hudsonia*. I grew 
up in New York State, near the Hudson River; the *hudsonia* confused me, 
since the birds are most definitely scarcer in New York State than they are 
at Denver Botanic Gardens. (That is, they're not in NY.) But here it refers 
to Hudson Bay in Saskatchewan, where it seems like Sabine encountered and 
described them (but I haven't had a chance to dive into that effort).

The genus name for magpies, Pica, connects the human with the bird. It 
refers to an urge to eat or a behavior of eating non-nutritional foodstuff. 
Apparently, the use of the word to describe human behavior comes from the 
tendency of magpies to eat (or at least inspect) a great diversity of 
potential food items. 

Until somewhat recently (perhaps until 2000, according to this AOS 
supplement 
<https://americanornithology.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/NACC_Supplements_2000_2022.pdf>),
 
"our" magpie was a subspecies of *Pica pica*, the common magpie of Europe 
and much of Asia. I didn't start birding until a decade or so after that, 
so perhaps someone with a longer memory than me can vouch for this.

A few years ago, I watched a young magpie stare at one of my chickens. The 
chicken stared back. They both seemed to recognize something in the other. 
In typical magpie fashion, the young magpie then tried to tear a tag off a 
small solar light near the chicken coop. That's really the only time I've 
seen a magpie behave in the way we're told magpies behave -- with an 
interest in collecting human objects.

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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