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BirdNote®
Pinyon-Juniper and Pinyon Jays
Written by Diane Hope
Pinyon-juniper habitat varies from sparse woodland to full-blown forest.
Lilian Hill: This entire pinyon pine forest which we’re in here in northern Arizona has been a source of food and subsistence for our people for many, many generations.
[introduces herself in Hopi] ... My name’s Lilian Hill, I am Hopi, Tobacco Clan and the Director of the Hopi Tutskwa Permaculture Institute. As indigenous people, we have historically managed the trees to improve and continue the health of the forest.
Pinyon nuts are an important food for indigenous people.
Lilian: When you eat the raw nut, the taste is very peculiar; it’s piney, it’s nutty, it’s a very robust and sweet flavor.
Pinyon Jays also rely heavily on the nuts. They live in socially complex flocks of up to 500, and each bird buries 20 to 30 thousand nuts a year. They fail to find around 10% of their cache, helping pine dispersal.
[Pinyon Jays]
But a warming, drying climate is causing massive pinyon tree die-off in places and is reducing nut crops across the West. Without any endangered species that call it home, the habitat has few, if any, legal protections from development and grazing.
Lilian: There needs to be some substantial co-management plans developed between tribal nations and the forest service in order to protect the pinyon-juniper forest.
Perhaps now is the time to remember America’s forgotten forest.
For BirdNote, I’m Diane Hope.
[Pinyon Jay flock soundscape mixed with Lilian singing traditional Hopi lullaby about the regeneration of plants from seeds]
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Producer: John Kessler
Production Manager: Allison Wilson
Editor: Ari Daniel
Producer: Mark Bramhill
Associate Producer: Ellen Blackstone
Field Recordings by Diane Hope
© 2020 BirdNote November 2020 Narrator: Diane Hope
ID# PIJA-01-2020-11-17 PIJA-01
Series
BirdNote
Episode
Pinyon-Juniper and Pinyon Jays
Producing Organization
BirdNote
Contributing Organization
BirdNote (Seattle, Washington)
AAPB ID
cpb-aacip-6973bba81c8
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Description
Episode Description
The pinyon-juniper woodlands of northern Arizona support Pinyon Jays, which rely heavily on pinyon nuts. The birds live in socially complex flocks of up to 500, and each buries 20-30 thousand nuts a year. They fail to find around 10% of those, helping pine dispersal. Pinyon nuts are also important to the Hopi people. Lilian Hill, Director of the Hopi Tutskwa Permaculture Institute, says they taste peculiar, both robust and sweet.
Created Date
2020-11-17
Asset type
Episode
Topics
Science
Subjects
Birds
Rights
Sounds for BirdNote stories were provided by the Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Xeno-Canto, Martyn Stewart, Chris Peterson, John Kessler, and others. Where music was used, fair use was taken into consideration. Individual credits are found at the bottom of each transcript.
Media type
Sound
Duration
00:01:45.195
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Credits
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Producing Organization: BirdNote
Writer: Hope, Diane
AAPB Contributor Holdings
BirdNote
Identifier: cpb-aacip-e69c2918ade (Filename)
Format: Zip Drive
Generation: Master
Duration: 00:01:45
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Citations
Chicago: “BirdNote; Pinyon-Juniper and Pinyon Jays,” 2020-11-17, BirdNote, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed August 24, 2025, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-6973bba81c8.
MLA: “BirdNote; Pinyon-Juniper and Pinyon Jays.” 2020-11-17. BirdNote, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. August 24, 2025. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-6973bba81c8>.
APA: BirdNote; Pinyon-Juniper and Pinyon Jays. Boston, MA: BirdNote, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-6973bba81c8