Barred Owl, The Raptor Center at the University of Minnesota

Barred Owl

COMMON NAME: Barred Owl

SCIENTIFIC NAME:Strix varia

IDENTIFYING CHARACTERISTICS:
An all-gray owl (although some individuals have a brown wash) streaked with white horizontal barring on the chest and vertical barring on the belly. It has a yellow beak and no tufts on the head. Its brown eyes distinguish it from the great gray owl.

RANGE:
Found in the United States and southern Canada east of the Rocky mountains, although it has been recently expanding its range westward. This is causing concern, as it may compete with the endangered spotted owl.

HABITAT:
A woodland owl, associated with flood plains, river bottoms, and lake margins.

NESTING:
A cavity nesting owl that will also nest in old crow or hawk nests or human-made structures.

FEEDING HABITS:
Barred owls feed on a variety of prey, including rodents, squirrels, rabbits, birds, and crustaceans.

RAPTOR CENTER DATA:
Another very common patient. Barred owls are generally docile patients, but can be very aggressive and attack when least expected.

CONSERVATION STATUS:
A very common species with no special status.

Other Web Resources:

Raptor Center Education Birds

Animated GIFs

Sounds

Teacher Lesson Plans

Barred Owl Range

Minnesota Ornithologists' Union bird range map

Additional Information (not specifically about owls):

Publications


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Last modified on Friday Jun 25, 2004

This page is located at http://www.cvm.umn.edu//raptor/info/barredowl.html