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Species Spotlight: Long Eared Owl

Scientific Name: Asio otus

Size: about 15 inches. Wingspan is around 36 - 42 inches and the average weight is between 7 - 8 ounces. The Long Eared Owl is sort of the intermediate between the Great Horned Owl and the Eastern Screech Owl in size. It's "ear tufts" are set closer to the center of the head than other horned owls, and it's eyes are a bright golden-orange. Feet and beak are relatively small in proportion to the rest of the body.

Range: Long Eared owls are distributed throughout the temperate zones of the Northern Hemisphere, in tropical America, and locally in Africa and Madagascar.

Habitat: prefers conifers, and mixed conniferous/deciduous woodlands, especially near water. Also can be found in parks, woodlands, orchards, and farm woodlands.

Food preferences: small rodents and birds, some amphibians, reptiles, fish, insects.

Mating: Monogamous.

Nesting: Usually in abandoned nests - especially crow, also hawks, squirrels, magpies, herons, and ravens. Sometimes will nest in loose colonies. Female selects the site and does all the brooding, fed by the male. Rarely nests on the ground. Nest sites are more often 25 to 35 feet above the ground. Family stays as a unit well after the young have fledged (sometimes until late Autumn), then young disperse to establish new territories.

Eggs: 4 - 5 white eggs, about 1.6" in length. Young hatch asynchronously.

Average Lifespan: Long lived. In captivity, some records note lifespans of 25 - 27 years. Expect 1/3 of that in the wild.

Hunting Technique: Flying while hunting.

Status: uncommon in West Virginia, mostly observed in higher altitudes. One recorded nest was found in Nicholas County (Bukelew & Hall, WV Breeding Bird Atlas, Pittsburgh Press) and some winter migration counts show individuals in Monongalia, Grant, Morgan, Summers, Upshur, and Webster counties (Venable, Birds of Prey, WVU Extension Service).

Notes: These birds are very nocturnal and firmly believe in daytime concealment when roosting. According to most distribution maps, this species is one of the most common in all the planet, close in distribution to the Barn Owl. It is unusual for owls to establish colonies, but Long Eared Owls like company. Varied calls include a series of drawn out hoots (one roughly every 2 seconds) also short soft "barks" and drawn out wails.

Ginger was found in Oglebay Park in Wheeling, West Virginia tangled in a barbed wire fence. The fence did extensive damage to her right wing, including pulling the skin and tissue away from the bone at the tip. Emergency surgery at Oglebay's Good Zoo was able to save her life, but she was not able to fly and kept re-injuring the surgery site. She was transferred to from Oglebay to TRAC in July 2000, and after repeated attempts at physical therapy failed we finally had to amputate the end of her wing. She is fully grown and weighs 10 ounces. We do not know exactly how old she is. Although she is unable to fly, she is doing fine and charms her audiences with her long eyelashes and dainty ways.


Photo - Steve Coleman