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Great Horned Owl
(Bubo Virginianus) Order:
Strigiformes Family: Strigidae Genus:
Bubo Species: Virginianus
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HABITAT AND RANGE:
The great horned owl frequents a wide
variety of terrain but is primarily a
resident of rather densely forested
regions. In addition to heavy woodlands,
it also likes more open woodlands,
orchards, parks, marshes, swamps,
rivers, valleys, canyons, ravines, grain
fields and brushy hillsides.
The Great Horned
owl can be found from Minnesota,
southern Ontario, southern Quebec,
western New Brunswick, Prince Edward
Island, northern Cape Breton Island and
Nova Scotia southward through
southeastern South Dakota, eastern
Kansas, eastern Oklahoma, and eastern
Texas to the Gulf Coast and Florida. |
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PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS:
The great horned owl is the largest of
the common resident owls of the United
States and second in overall size on
this continent only to the snowy owl.
Members of this species are the only
large owls in North America with very
distinctive ear tufts. The color varies
from gray in more northerly birds to
reddish in southern birds. The plumage
is generally dark on the upper parts and
somewhat lighter on the under parts with
a characteristic white patch on the
throat and upper breast. On the average,
it weighs 1.5 kg. (53 oz.) and its size
ranges from 46-64 cm. (18-25 inches). |
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ADAPTATIONS:
The great horned owl is the fiercest,
most aggressive, and most impressive owl
of North America. Essentially a
nocturnal hunter, it is apt to be seen
on the wing at almost anytime of night
or day and is quite commonly abroad on
moderately cloudy to heavily overcast
days. It has superb vision, day or
night, and even better hearing which
enables it to pinpoint the exact
location of its prey. It can make an
amazingly wide variety of sounds ranging
from deep booming hoots to whistles,
shrieks, screams and hisses. It is
mostly solitary in its habits. |
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ECOLOGICAL
ROLE: As a predator the great horned
owl is beneficial in reducing and
regulating the size of rodent
populations. They also help maintain the
overall good health of small mammal
populations by culling out the sick,
injured or old individuals. They can
also be destructive of game birds, song
birds, game mammals, poultry and
sometimes domestic pets. |
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DIET:
Great horned owls are carnivorous. They
consume a variety of small mammals,
particularly rats and rabbits. They also
attack and kill woodchucks, skunks and
porcupines. Owls of any other species
may become prey to the Great Horned owl
along with quail, grouse, geese and
turkeys. They may also eat snakes,
turtles, lizards, frogs, toads and
salamanders. At the zoo, they are fed
meat and/or dead rats and rabbits. |
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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT:
Mating in the Great Horned owl takes
place from November to January. The nest
is practically always an abandoned nest
of a Redtailed hawk, at a height of 40
to 70 feet, firmly placed in a principal
upper crotch of the tree. A single brood
is produced of two to five dull white
granular eggs being laid in December or
January. Incubation is entirely by the
female and takes from 28 to 30 days. The
young are altricial at birth and reach
adulthood by the first winter. |
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STATUS IN WILD:
At present this owl is very widespread
and seems to be maintaining a stable
population throughout its range. |
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