Folks, 

 

The following is posted with permission from Mark Cranford. Renfrew County
is located along the Ottawa River north of Ottawa and south of Algonquin
Park.

 

Jeremy

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Inglis, Jeremy (MNR) 
Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2005 2:50 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Barred owl mortalities

 

Hi Mark,

 

I thought I would go through you to see if the following was an appropriate
posting for Ontbirds. I work for the Pembroke District Ministry of Natural
Resources which takes in all of Renfrew County. For about the last 3 weeks
we have been receiving ever increasing reports of diurnal barred owl
activity at bird feeders where the owls are attempting to catch voles, red
squirrels and even ruffed grouse throughout daylight hours. Since last week
we have received 4 dead (non-roadkilled) barred owls at our office. Two were
found incidentally in forested areas and 2 have been found in close
proximity to bird feeders. All appear to be quite emaciated suggesting that
there is a lack of small mammals (or at least access to small mammals).
There is still quite a crust on our snow (enough to support the weight of a
deer) so I imagine that owls, and other predators, are having trouble
accessing prey. Just to be sure, we will be sending some owls to Guelph for
necropsy but I imagine the diagnosis will be starvation.

 

I'm not sure if there are any data on barred owl weights but I have been
attempting to collect a weight on dead owls whenever possible, as follows:

1)       BARR: Found below bird feeder Feb 15'05: 545.7 gm.

2)       BARR: Found below bird feeder Mar 3 '05: 498.8 gm.

3)       BARR: Incidental in forested area Mar 5 '05: 450 gm.

4)       BARR: Incidental in forested area Mar 6 '05: 385.2 gm.

The following are road-kills for comparison.

5)       BARR: Road-kill Feb 28 '05: 687.5 gm.

6)       BARR: Road-kill  Feb 28 '05: 554.9 gm.

 

I just received another report of a dead owl at a bird feeder and I will
collect data on it as well. All of the above are distributed throughout the
county. Presumably, barred owls are not as nomadic as this year's Great
Grays and do not follow prey as the GGO's have done. Interestingly, although
we have had some Great grays this winter in agricultural areas closer to the
Ottawa River, most appeared to have moved south to the Ottawa area, where
conditions and prey are presumably more favourable. With the onset of the
breeding season, barred owls are probably even more inclined to remain
within territories anyway.

Just thought I would pass this along in case a similar phenomenon is
occurring elsewhere. If there are declines in this years owl surveys, this
type of mortality might be considered.

 

Thank you,

 

Jeremy

 

Jeremy Inglis

Fish and Wildlife Technical Specialist

Ministry of Natural Resources

Pembroke District

31 Riverside Drive

Pembroke, ON   K8A 8R6

Tel. 613-732-5590

Fax. 613-732-2972

Email. [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

 

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