Burrowing Owl
Adaptations, Habitat, & Facts
burrowing owl
burrowing owl, (Athene cunicularia), small owl of the family Strigidae (order Strigiformes) that inhabits prairie lands of the Western Hemisphere from southwestern Canada to Tierra del Fuego. Burrowing owls live in holes abandoned by other animals. They eat mainly insects and small rodents.
Burrowing owls are slender, rather long-legged birds about 20 cm (8 inches) long. They are brown with small white spots, a white face and brows, and yellow eyes. During the day burrowing owls may stand by the burrow or on a post. They hunt near sunrise and sunset, capturing prey by running it down along the ground or swooping in from a nearby perch. Burrowing owls are preyed upon by a wide variety of predators, including falcons, hawks, and other birds of prey, wild and domesticated canines and felines, weasels, and badgers. When approached by humans, they bob up and down, likely as a way to gauge their distance from those approaching, and then fly a short distance away.
Some classifications also consider other members of Athene as burrowing owls. Little owls (A. noctua), which live in Eurasia and northern Africa, and spotted owlets (A. brama), a species whose range includes India and parts of the Middle East, also frequently make their nests in burrows.
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