Snowy Owl, adult male
About the photographs
Snowy Owl, female
Snowy Owl, 1st year male, Rhode Island, December
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- Cool Facts
- Description
- Similar Species
- Sound
- Range
- Habitat
- Food
- Behavior
- Reproduction
- Conservation Status
- Other Names
At the extreme northern margins of the arctic tundra lives the Snowy Owl, the northernmost, heaviest, and most distinctively marked owl of North America. Largely diurnal, it spends much of its time perched still and silent on prominent lookouts, waiting to make forays for prey.
Cool Facts
- Snowy Owl pairs fiercely defend their nests against
predators, even wolves.
- An individual adult Snowy Owl may eat three to five
lemmings per day, or up to 1,600 per year.
- The Snowy Owl can be found represented in cave
paintings in Europe.
- In some years, some North American Snowy Owls remain
on their breeding grounds year-round, while others migrate in winter to
southern Canada and the northern half of the contiguous United States. In the
northern plains, New York, and New England, Snowy Owls occur regularly in
winter. Elsewhere, such as in the Pacific Northwest, the Midwest, and eastern
Canada, Snowy Owls are irruptive, appearing only in some winters but not in
others.
- Young male Snowy Owls are barred with dark brown and
get whiter as they get older. Females keep some dark markings throughout their
lives. Young males tend to have a white bib, a white back of the head, and
fewer rows of bars on the tail than females. Although the darkest males and
the palest females are nearly alike in color, the whitest birds are always
males and the most heavily barred ones are always females. Some old males can
be nearly pure white.
Description
- Size: 52-71 cm (20-28 in)
- Wingspan: 126-145 cm (50-57 in)
- Weight: 1600-2950 g (56.48-104.14 ounces)
- Large, white owl.
- Some dark barring.
- Variable amounts of dark brown barring on head, wings, back, breast, and
tail.
- Eyes yellow.
- Feet white and completely feathered.
- Bill black and mostly covered by feathers.
Sex Differences
Female slightly larger and more heavily barred. Male may be entirely white.
Immature
Immature like adult female. Male gets whiter as it ages.
Similar Species
- White-morph Gyrfalcon has smaller head, pointed wings,
and long tail.
- Barn Owl is white below, but has a brown back and lacks
barring.
- Albino Red-tailed Hawk lacks barring, has smaller head,
and longer tail.
Sound
Generally silent in winter. Call a deep, powerful hoot. Also a series of harsh clicking.
»listen to songs of this species
Range
Range Map
© 2004 Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Summer Range
Breeds in high Arctic from coastal Alaska across Canada to Labrador. Also in northern Greenland, Scandinavia, and Russia.
Winter Range
Winters from breeding grounds southward to northern United States.
Habitat
Breeds on open tundra. Winters in fields and on beaches.
Food
Lemmings, when available. Also rabbits, rodents, waterfowl, other birds, and fish.
Behavior
Foraging
Waits on a perch until it locates prey, then pursues and seizes prey in its talons. Can also locate prey visually or by sound, even in dense grass or under thick layers of snow.
Displays
Male's territorial display includes booming hoots and threat postures, including puffing out their throats, raising their tails, and bowing deeply.
Reproduction
Nest Type
A scrape in the ground, formed into a rounded depression by the female.
Egg Description
White.
Clutch Size
3-11 eggs.
Condition at Hatching
Covered in white down, eyes closed.
Conservation Status
Population sizes difficult to estimate because of size and remoteness of habitat. No information on long-term population changes, except an apparent decline in northern Europe.
Other Names
Harfang des neiges (French)
Sources used to construct this page:
- American Ornithologists' Union. 2003. Forty-fourth supplement to the
American Ornithologists' Union Check-list of North American Birds. Auk 120: 923-931.
- Parmelee, D. 1992. Snowy Owl (Nyctea scandiaca). In The Birds of North America, No. 10 (A. Poole, P. Stettenheim, and F. Gill, Eds.).
Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences; Washington, DC: The American
Ornithologists' Union.