Boreal Owl
| Aegolius funereus |
Order STRIGIFORMES - Family STRIGIDAE |
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- Description
- Sound
- Conservation Status
- Other Names
- Cool Facts
- Full detailed species account
A small owl of boreal and montane forests, the Boreal Owl is found throughout Alaska and Canada, and across northern Eurasia, as well. It is found in the lower 48 states only in the mountains of the West, in extreme northern Minnesota, and as an occasional winter visitor to the northern states.
Description
- Small owl.
- No ear tufts.
- White face outlined in black.
- Fine spots on top of head.
- Underparts dirty white, streaked with brown.
- Bill yellow.
- Size: 21-28 cm (8-11 in)
- Wingspan: 55-62 cm (22-24 in)
- Weight: 93-215 g (3.28-7.59 ounces)
Sex Differences
Sexes alike in plumage, female larger.
Sound
Song a series of low, whistled toots.
»listen to songs of this species
Conservation Status
Widespread and common in boreal forest, but reliable population estimates not available. Considered a "sensitive" species in range in United States outside of Alaska. Relies on mature and dead trees for nesting sites, and so is sensitive to clear cutting.
Other Names
Nyctale boréale (French)
Lechuza de Tengmalm (Spanish)
Tengmalm's Owl, Richardson's Owl (English)
Cool Facts
- The female Boreal Owl is much larger than the male. The species shows the most extreme reversed sexual dimorphism of any American owl.
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The Boreal Owl finds its prey by sound. It can locate mice even through vegetation and under snow.
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The ear openings on a Boreal Owl's skull are asymmetrical, with one opening high up on the skull and the other much lower. The different positions of the holes help the owl find exactly where a sound comes from, helping gauge height as well as distance.
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Boreal Owls usually are considered monogamous, with one male mating with one female. Several studies in Europe found that one male may mate with up to three females, and a female occasionally mates with two different males. They found that such multiple mating occurs most frequently when mice numbers are at their highest. (Finding easy prey to feed the young means that less help is needed in raising young owls.) When mice numbers were low, all the owls were monogamous.
Sources used to construct this page:
Hayward, G. D. and P. H. Hayward. 1993. Boreal Owl (Aegolius funereus). In The Birds of North America, No. 63 (A. Poole, and F. Gill, eds.). The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and The American Ornithologists' Union, Washington, D.C.