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Short-eared Owls - Asio flammeusClick on images to see large pictures, scroll
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A Danish bishop and amateur naturalist, Erich Ludvigsen Pontoppidan, published the first description of this Owl in 1763. In Latin, the word "flammeus" means fiery, flaming, or the colour of fire. Local names for the Short-eared Owl include the Evening Owl, Marsh Owl Bog or Swamp Owl, Grass Owl, Meadow Owl, Mouse-hawk, and Flat-faced Owl. Description: The Short-eared Owl is a medium-sized, diurnal and nocturnal Owl. When perched it leans forward, more hawklike than other Owls, and appears bulky rather than sleek. The plumage is buffy brown with dark streaks on the chest, belly, and back. Males tend to be lighter in colour than females. This colouring provides good camouflage, but if this fails, a Short-eared Owl will feign death to avoid detection. The wings and tail are strongly barred. The yellow eyes are circled with black and set in whitish or buffy-white facial disks, which are suffused with a ring of brown. The bill is black. The head appears round without ear tufts, but at very close range small ear tufts are visible. In flight, the dark "wrist" on the underwing is the key field mark. Size: Lengths 33-43cm (13-17") Wingspan
female 107cm (42"), male 105cm (41") (averages) Voice: Short-eared Owls are generally quiet, owing to their diurnal nature and the wide open habitats where visual displays would are more effective than in forests. The male's territorial song is a pulsing "voo-hoo-hoo", resembling an old steam engine. This song is given mainly during flight displays and the female responds with a barking "kee-ow". When excited near the nest, both sexes squawk, bark, hiss and squeal. Hunting
& Food: Short-eared Owls hunt mainly at night
and during the morning and late afternoon. They fly over open areas, a few
feet above ground, and pounce when prey is located. In dense vegetation
they will hover over prey, often for extended periods when facing into the
wind, before pouncing. They occasionally hunt from a perch or while
standing on the ground. Short-eared Owls eat mainly small mammals, but
sometimes take birds. Meadow voles (Microtus species) are the
primary prey. Deer mice, shrews, ground squirrels, pocket gophers, pocket
mice, moles, rats, bats, rabbits, and muskrats are also taken. Birds
probably are more important when Short-eared Owls hunt in marshes and
along coastal areas, where they can target shorebirds, terns, and small
gulls and seabirds. In inland habitats they take mainly Horned Larks,
meadowlarks, blackbirds, and pipits. A few insects such as roaches,
grasshoppers, beetles, katydids, and caterpillars are also taken. Unlike
most Owls, prey is normally carried in its talons. Breeding: Courtship and territorial
behaviour is spectacular for an Owl. Males perform aerial displays by
rising quickly with rhythmic and exaggerated wing beats, hovering, gliding
down, and rising again, often 200 to 400 meters (650 to 1,300 feet)
above ground. Wing claps, in bursts of 2 to 6 per second, are often made
during this flight and some singing occurs. The flight can be ended with a
spectacular descent where the male hold his wings aloft and shimmies
rapidly to the ground. Two birds may engage in flight, locking talons, and
fighting briefly. Often, a display where one bird flashes its light
underwing towards another is used during territorial and courtship
flights. The Short-eared Owl nests on the ground, unlike most other Owls.
Nests are usually situated in the shelter of a grass mound, under a grass
tuft, or among herbaceous ground cover. Nests are loosely constructed by
the female, who scrapes a spot on the ground and then lines the scrape
with grass stems, herb stalks, and feathers plucked from her breast.
Clutch sizes range from 4 to 14 eggs (average 5 to 7), with large clutches
laid during years of high food abundance. Clutch size increases from south
to north. Eggs are laid every 1 to 2 days and incubation commences with
the first. Incubation is done largely by the female, with the male
bringing food to the nest and occasionally taking a turn incubating. Young
grow very rapidly after hatching, and begin to wander from the nest as
soon as 12 days, an adaptation for a ground-nesting species to reduce the
amount of time they are vulnerable to predation. Young fledge at about 4
weeks. Mortality: Wild Short-eared Owls have reached almost 13 years of age. Natural enemies include many diurnal raptors such as the Bald Eagle, Northern Goshawk, Gyrfalcon, Red-tailed Hawk, and Snowy Owl. Because they nest on the ground, they are vulnerable to mammalian predators such as skunks, dogs, foxes, and coyotes, while Jaegers, gulls, ravens, and crows steal eggs and small chicks. Collisions with vehicles account for a large number of deaths. Also, They are attracted to the wide open fields of airports and so many are killed by collisions with aircraft. Habitat: Short-eared Owls inhabit wide open spaces such as grasslands, prairie, agricultural fields, salt marshes, estuaries, mountain meadows, and alpine and Arctic tundra. Breeding habitat must have sufficient ground cover to conceal nests and nearby sources of small mammals for food. Communal roosts occur in oldgrowth fields, along thick hedgerows, in overgrown rubble in abandoned fields, or in clumps of dense conifers. These Owls tend to roost in trees only when snow covers the ground. During migration, Short-eared Owls will move through high mountain passes, flying at great heights. Distribution: Short-eared Owls occur widely in the Old World, in Iceland, the Hawaiian Islands, Galapagos Islands, and North and South America.
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