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Our Resident Screech Owls

Otus

 

 

Date Brought to Sharon Audubon Center: May 2003

History: Otus was brought to the Sharon Audubon Center by a local rehabilitator with a wing injury likely sustained from a collision with a car.  This is not an uncommon occurrence since owls often hunt for small rodents, which are attracted to food and other litter, along roads. His wing injury prevents him from sustaining flight long enough to hunt for his own food, so he now resides in the company of our red phased screech owl Shadow.

 

Shadow

 

Brought to Sharon Audubon Center: March 2002

History: Shadow was found in Dover Plains, New York and brought into Sharon Audubon Center’s Wildlife Rehabilitation Center for care. Although it was unclear what had happened to the bird, Audubon staff suspected it had been hit by a car, breaking the right wing.  The wing was wrapped and left to heal, but full mobility never returned, leaving this bird unable to sustain flight. This Screech Owl spends most of the day inside its nest box resting, but continues to be active at night.  This bird has joined the rest of the resident education birds at the Audubon Center teaching thousands of children and adults about respecting this beautiful species.

 

 

Eastern Screech Owl

(Otus asio)

 

Average Height: 7-10 inches

Average Weight: ¼ - ½ pound (4-8 oz.)

Wingspan1 ½ - 2 feet

Lifespan7-8 years in wild, up to 17 years in captivity

 

Description:  The Screech Owl is the smallest owl with feather tufts (eartufts) in the Eastern U.S. There are two different color phases- red and gray. The chest and belly is heavily barred. The female is generally larger than the male.

Call:  The Screech Owl does not screech, but has a rather eerie, mournful whinny which rises then falls down the scale.

Range:  The Eastern Screech Owl covers the majority of the eastern U.S. and extreme Southern Canada, from the Atlantic coast west through plains, south to Gulf of Mexico.

The Western Screech Owl lives throughout the Pacific coast east through the Rockies.

Habitat:  Screech Owls are commonly spotted in small woodlots, swamps and old orchards, but are also common in urban and suburban areas.

Diet:  Hunting soon after dusk, the Screech Owl feeds extensively on insects, but also eats small rodents, small amphibians and occasionally small birds.

 

 

 

 

 

 


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Audubon Sharon . 325 Cornwall Bridge Rd. . Sharon, CT 06069 . (860) 364-0520