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Long Lake News |
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Great Horned Owl
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Geographic Range Great horned owls occur all over the United States and most of Canada, and southward to Central and South America to the Straits of Magellan. They are one of the most widespread species of owls. They mostly reside year round in their territories, but ones from the far north move southward in fall or winter. |
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Description Great
horned owls are big and bulky (3-4 pounds), standing 18-25" tall with a
wingspan of 36-60" long. Males and females are similar in appearance, except
the female is the larger of the two. The plumage of the great horned owl
varies regionally, from pale to dark. In general, they have brown body
plumage covered with darker brown spots and white throat feathers that
contrast with the dark cross-barred under parts. The white feathers stand
out like a collar against the darker underside feathers. Some great horned
owls may be very pale underneath, but still the white collar stands out.The great horned owls facial disk may have orangish or grayish feathers, and whiter feathers that form a V between the yellow eyes with black pupils. Their ear tufts are large and set far apart on the head. Just like a dog, great horned owls use these ear tufts to convey body language - when they are irritated the tufts lie flat and when they are inquisitive the ears stand upright. In summary, four good field marks for the great horned owl are: size, eye color, ear tufts and the white collar. Voice Young great horned owls have a screeching hunger call that is also very loud and sounds like short blasts of escaping steam through metal pipes.
Habitat
Breeding and Nesting Throughout the winter, courting great horned owls will light up their nesting territory with nighttime hooting. Generally 2-3 white eggs are laid, although they may lay up to 6 eggs. Both the male and female incubate the eggs for 30-35 days. The young are fed by both parents, and the parents fiercely defend their nest site against intruders. If young owls fall out of the nest prematurely, the adults will feed the bird on the ground. The young fledge from the nest at 45-55 days old. Great horned owls can live greater than 12 years; some captive birds have lived to 29 years old. Food
and Hunting Great horned owls eat a wide variety of prey, both small and large. Cottontail rabbits seem to be a prominent food, but the owls will take squirrels, shrews, jackrabbits, muskrats, mice, weasels, skunks, pocket gophers, snakes, domestic cats, bats, beetles, scorpions, frogs, grasshoppers, and a wide variety of birds, from small passerines like juncos and sparrows to wild ducks, grouse, pheasants, and even other owls. It seems that the world is one big smorgasbord to a great horned owl. Several hours after an owl has eaten, its stomach forms a pellet of fur, feathers, exoskeletons, and bones - indigestible parts of its meal. The owl then "upchucks" this pellet. Owls may have a favorite roost or perch spot where they cast out these pellets. Scientists collect the pellets and gently pull them apart in their laboratories to see what the owl has been eating.
Behavior Contrary to popular belief, owls can not turn their heads completely around. They can rotate their heads 270 degrees, thanks to extra vertebra in their necks. Because their eyes are fixed in their sockets - they can't move their eyes up or down or side to side - the owl has to move its whole head to compensate for the fixed eyes. When owls are awake, they use their hearing and eyesight to alert them of danger or possible prey. Great horned owl eyes, which are almost as large as a humans, allows a great amount of light to pass through the pupil, so the owl can see in dark conditions. If a great horned owl was as big as a human, its eyes would be the size of oranges! Owls have
incredible senses of hearing, a trait that allows them to hunt at night.
Their ears are located on the sides of the head, but are off-set, not
symmetrical like human ears. The openings of the ears are slightly tilted in
different directions - often the right ear is longer and set higher up on
the skull. Plus, owls have soft feathers that surround the openings which
they can spread to make a funnel for sound to enter the ear. This enables
the owl to use triangulation to pinpoint the source of a sound, when the
prey can not be seen. By tilting or moving their head until the sound is of
equal volume in each ear, the owl can pinpoint the direction and distance of
the sound.
Additional Notes Owls have a third, opaque eye membrane, called the nictitating membrane. This membrane helps to clean the eye of material and protect the eye from the brightness of day or foreign objects at night. Owls have four toes on each foot, like most birds. Instead of having three toes in front and one in back, an owls outer toe is reversible - it can rotate so that there are two toes in front and two in back. This helps the owl grip a perch but also creates a bigger "mitt" when it swoops down to catch prey - kind of like the difference between a catcher's mitt and a shortstops. At night an owl needs all the advantages they can muster to capture prey. The owls facial disk is shaped like a shallow bowl. This shape acts like a parabolic dish, to help funnel sound into the ear openings. Family: Strigidae (STRIJ-ih-dee). The Typical Owl Family, includes about 140 owls except for barn owls and bay owls.
Genus: Bubo (BEW-boh) is from the Latin word meaning "owl" or from
the Greek word for "eagle owl" used by the great 1st century Roman
naturalist Pliny (Gaius Plinius Secundus). Great horned owls are related to
the eagle owl of Eurasia.
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