Did you know?
- Barn Owl is silent in flight due to soft fringe-edged feathers that don't "swoosh" as they move.
- A Barn Owl is about the size of a small cat, but only weighs a pound.
- The Barn Owl has excellent vision and hearing for capturing prey at night.
They have excellent eyesight in near-darkness. When it is completely dark, owls use their excellent hearing to find prey. Barn Owls have lop-sided ears! One is higher than the other, which helps them to pinpoint exactly where tiny sounds are coming from.
Barn owls can be seen all year round; during the day, but best at dusk.
Baby barn owls will screech all night long when they're hungry, which is always, as they wait for mom and dad owl to return with mice and gophers to feed them. It's a little late in the nesting season, but barn owls are late bloomers and pay little respect to seasons.
Barn owls as totem or spirit animals signify seeing and hearing in darkness, meaning exceptional sight, knowledge and understanding where others cannot see, you can see what is hidden, looking deeper to find what resources you need. The Barn owl is a sign, of strength Above adversity.
Barn Owls as pets
We do not consider that Barn Owls make good pets. Feathers are not designed for stroking – it reduces their natural waterproofing. Barn Owls have sharp talons and strong feet which can inflict deep puncture wounds and scratches.But barn owls have traditionally been thought of as sedentary species, having been seen in winter by farmers around in barns going back for decades. This low ratio of weight to wing size allows the barn owl to fly slowly and deliberately over fields while it searches by sight and sound for its prey below.
“They are natural predators of gophers and voles which can be really horrible pests for agriculture.†But as good as the owls can be at controlling rodents on farms, growers may still need rodenticides to control the population explosions that can happen with any small rodent species.
Barn owls usually choose to nest in holes in trees, or undisturbed buildings such as barns and outbuildings, ruins and, in some areas, mines, cliffs and quarries.
Calls. Barn Owls don't hoot the way most owls do; instead, they make a long, harsh scream that lasts about 2 seconds. It's made mostly by the male, who often calls repeatedly from the air. Males use it to invite a female to inspect a nest site, and females use it to beg for food from the male.
Barn Owls are uncommon but difficult to see because they are nocturnal and remain in cavities or inside structures during the day.
Barn Owl females are somewhat showier than males. She has a more reddish and more heavily spotted chest. The spots may indicate the quality of the female. Heavily spotted females get fewer parasitic flies and may be more resistant to parasites and diseases.
Apart from rodents and other small mammals, Barn Owls also hunt birds, fish, reptiles, and insects.
Barn owls are the most widespread of all owl species, and are found on every continent except Antarctica. In the Americas, barn owls occur in suitable habitat throughout South and Central America, and in North America as far north as the northern United States and southwestern British Columbia.
Voles, mice, shrews, nestling rabbits, moles and small birds can all be feeded to the owls provided that no rat or mouse poisons have been used in your locality.
Barn owls do not have many predators. Nestlings are sometimes taken by stoats and snakes. Adults may be killed by great horned owls occasionally. Barn owls in western Europe are much smaller than those in North America.
Are barn owls dangerous? Not at all. Barn Owls are rather shy and will fly away upon being approached by humans, even abandoning their eggs and chicks.
Barn Owls Are Safe
They aren't like other birds of prey. There are absolutely no recorded instances of a barn owl attacking a human anywhere on earth, and they mainly keep to themselves. Owls just need food and shelter, and once you provide that to them with a nest box, they'll stay with you for life.Barn owls are just like us.These birds of prey are highly sensitive and intelligent creatures who have complex communication systems and cooperative social structures.
Although their names are similar, and they share some characteristics, barred and barn owls are very different birds. However, the barred owl lives and hunts in more forested areas, while the barn owl lives in old buildings, such as barns and silos, and hunts in open areas, such as fields and marshes.
This young barn owl is one in a million after being born with a rare genetic condition that has made her feathers jet black. Sable, who is two years old, suffers from melanism, a 100,000-to-one gene mutation that makes her the exact opposite to an albino.
What class is a Barn Owl?
BARN OWL CLASSIFICATIONOr to be more precise, the Barn Owl is in a family of its own. Not only does the Barn Owl look different than other owls, due to its heart-shaped face, short tail, and small eyes, it is actually classified in a different group than all other North American owls.
This white and gold owl has a heart-shaped face and dark eyes. The shape of their face actually helps to funnel sound to their ears, which are located beneath their fluffy head feathers. Experiments have shown that barn owls can hunt entirely by sound.
Migration. Some remain all winter near northern edges of range, but some (perhaps especially young birds) move long distances southward in fall.