Pica is a genus of seven species of birds in the family Corvidae in both the New World and the Old. It is one of several corvid genera whose members are known as magpies. Pica have long tails and predominantly black and white plumage, with iridescent blue, green, purple and bronze colours on the wings and tail in good light. After Corvus, this genus is the second most widespread within the Corvidae family, being distributed across Eurasia, north Africa, and western North America. Molecular phylogeny suggests that Pica is most closely related to nutcrackers (Nucifraga), jackdaws (Coloeus) and crows and ravens (Corvus).
The genus Pica was introduced by the French zoologist Mathurin Jacques Brisson in 1760. He derived the name by tautonymy from the specific epithet of the Eurasian magpie Corvus pica which was introduced by Linnaeus in 1758. Pica is the Latin word for the Eurasian magpie.
In 2018, a molecular phylogenetic study found that the Eurasian magpie consisted of multiple species including the Maghreb magpie, the Asir magpie, the black-rumped magpie and the oriental magpie.
The genus contains seven living species; species order follows AviList:
This phylogeny was concluded by Gang Song et al.'s 2018 study; it included all the taxa.
A cladogram was established in A. P. Kryukov's 2025 study; note that it is only partial, with Asir and black-rumped magpies not included.
A range gap formerly existed between Pica pica and Pica serica in the Amur region of southeast Siberia to eastern Mongolia, but with range expansion in recent decades by both species, this has now filled in; hybrids have been observed where the two now meet, but have low breeding success.
Two prehistoric species of Pica are currently known: Pica mourerae, from fossils found in PlioceneâÂÂPleistocene boundary strata on Mallorca, and Pica praepica, from Early Pleistocene strata of Bulgaria.