Barred Owl Basics

 

Barred Owl Basics

Barred Owls are:  

 
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Named for the horizontal bars on their breast feathers. (Not the "Bard" Shakespeare!)

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Territorial and monogamous. It's rare to see more than 2 Barred Owls together except in the breeding season. It only sounds like there are a dozen in your back yard.

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Non-migratory, year-round residents.
Adults on a territory will probably die within a half mile of their nest

 

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Generalist, opportunistic predators. They catch small to medium-sized prey by surprise, mostly at night.

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Prey includes: crawfish, goldfish, snakes, rats and mice, small rabbits and gray squirrels, flying squirrels, bats, birds-cardinals, grackles, Cedar Waxwings, Flickers, etc., and large insects, especially cicadas in the summer.

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Cavity nesters

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Very few owl species actually build a nest. Most nest in holes in trees, while some will use an abandoned crow or hawk nest. Great-horned Owls usually use old stick nests, Barred Owls rarely do. Barred Owls will use nest boxes. (See plans)

As with most birds of prey, female Barred Owls are larger than males. Females weigh between 1.75 - 2.5 lbs. Males weigh between 1.3 and 1.8 lbs. Their wingspan is about 38-42 inches.

Barred Owls nest once a year, usually as they approach their second "hatchday." They lay 1-4 (very rarely) eggs, and usually raise 2 young. A Barred Owl in its early teens is getting pretty old.  We've had two or three cases of pairs renesting after losing a first clutch of eggs, but this is rare.

In the Charlotte area, eggs are laid around the beginning of March. The young hatch in about 30 days and leave the nest well before they are fully grown or feathered, at about 4-5 weeks of age. Once they leave the cavity, they do not go back to it. Downy young can use their beak and claws to climb up trees when they fall, which they do not uncommonly. Young found on the ground with no obvious injury should just be put back up on a branch. The parents will deliver food to them.

Males do all the hunting while the female is on eggs (about 30 days) and probably most of the hunting during the first 2 weeks after the young hatch. As the young get larger and more demanding, the female will join in the hunting. Young are dependent upon their parents roughly through June. In July they leave home and wander only a few miles away in search of good habitat not already occupied by Barred Owls. The farthest we've had a young disperse from its nest is 11 miles.  

Males use a larger territory than females. In suburban Charlotte, the average male's territory is about 200 acres vs. 100 acres for females. A 200 acre territory would be 0.6 miles in diameter.

Pairs nest as close as 400 yds apart, with very little overlap in the territories of neighboring males. Females apparently have some visiting privileges with their neighboring males.  This year we had two pairs nesting about 100 yds apart (at the Nature Museum in Freedom Park).

If you have owls in your neighborhood, we're interested in your observations. If you find a young on the ground, we'd like to band it.

Email Rob Bierregaard with comments or questions.

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