no, they are not endangered or threatened, this goes for all species of scrub jays.
scrub jays look like a pale blue. similar to a blue jay.
Jays will eat anything edible.
scrub jays eat insects, berries, nuts, and seeds. They also eat insects, Spiders, lizards and even small snakes.
There lifecycle is an egg to a little bird to a aldult Scrub jay
The Common Pauraque is found in the southern tip of Texas and inhabits woodland clearing and scrub.
there biggest enemy is humans .
They shriek to scare off other animals...I think.
G. Thomas Bancroft has written: 'The molt of scrub jays and blue jays in Florida' -- subject(s): Birds, Blue jay, Florida scrub jay, Molting, Physiology
I believe that a variation of blue jays, the Western Scrub Jay has been sighted there.
In working on my latest series of books, Wild About Florida, I became interested in Florida scrub jays and also asked this question. I found one researcher who studied the birds at Archbold Biological Station, the foremost research station when it comes to the Florida scrub jay. Dr. Aurélie Coulon estimated that only five percent of the state's original scrub habitat, the only place these birds can survive in the wild, remains. Her findings determined that there are fewer than 8,000 Florida Scrub-Jays remaining in the world. This was published in the scientific journal, Molecular Ecology in April 2008.
Scrub Jays eat mostly insects and fruit during spring and summer, and switch to nuts and seeds during fall and winter. They eat small animals such as lizards and nestling birds, sometimes shadowing adult birds to find their nests. For plant material, scrub-jays eat acorns, pine nuts, juniper berries, and grass seeds; sunflower seeds and peanuts at feeders; as well as cultivated corn, almonds, walnuts, and cherries.