Flammulated Owl


Scientific name:  Megascops flammeolus
Family Name:  Strigidae

Are they endangered?  No, they are not endangered.  (IUCN Red list: Least concern.)   They are yellow-listed in the National Audubon Society’s 2007 Watchlist which means that their numbers are decreasing and conservation efforts should be made.

What are their past/present problems?  Their biggest problem is logging, where the forests where they live are cut down.  They also have problems with forests that get very thick with bushes and trees.  This makes hunting for prey harder.  Other things like cold weather cause their insect prey to not come out.  When that happens, many owls and owlets die from hunger.

What do they look like?  These owls are colored for camouflage (hiding in trees).  They have a brown back with feathers that have orange and white edges.  Their raised brow is white and their face is striped with white and brown.  Their bellies are white, brown, and reddish brown spotted.  Their tails are brown and white striped.

How big are they?  Their length is 6-7 inches long (very small) and if they spread out their wings, they would only reach a foot wide.

How many eggs do they lay?  The female Flammulated Owl lays from 2 to 4 white eggs once a year.  Hatches in a little more than 3 weeks.

How long do the fledglings stay in the nest?  These birds like to live in tree holes that other birds don’t live in anymore.  They will also find other holes in trees.  Young birds [fledglings] stay in the nest for about 25 days.
When do they hunt?  They hunt at night. (nocturnal)
What do they eat?  They eat insects, spiders, small mammals like MICE, and small birds.
Where do they live?  They live in Canada, the United States, Central America and Mexico.
What kind of place do they like to live in? 
Interesting facts:
These birds like forests that have lots of pine trees and oak trees in them. 
Out of all the owls in North America, the Flammulated Owl is one of the tiniest
These birds will catch their prey while they are flying, while they are on the ground, or even as the prey crawls in the trees.
The owls fly silently.

Works Cited:

Alsop, Fred.  Birds of North America.  New York:  DK Publishing, 2001.

Flammulated owl.  21 Feb. 2008.  <http://audubon2.org/watchlist/viewSpecies.jsp?id=83>.

Flammulated owl.  4 Oct. 2007.  <http://www.peregrinefund.org/Explore_Raptors/owls/flammula.html>.

“Megascops flammeolus.”  10 Dec. 2007.  <http://www.iucnredlist.org/search/details.php/48503/all>.

Philipps, Dave.  “Owl study may lead to better understanding of man’s effect on land.”  The Gazette.  31 July 2006.

Schmoker, Bill.  “Re: Owl pictures (etc.).”    E-mail to Club Web.  2 Nov. 2007.