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The great grey owl (Strix nebulosa) (also great gray owl in American English) is a true owl, and is the world's largest species of owl by length. It is distributed across the Northern Hemisphere , and it is the only species in the genus Strix found in both Eastern and Western Hemispheres.
For an owl its size, the barred owl also consumes a large amount of arthropods and other invertebrates. [4] [116] [131] [132] One study from a wide swath of the range found that among 2234 accrued prey items, 76% were mammals, 15.8% were invertebrates, 5.8% were birds and 2.5% were other vertebrates. [133]
Blakiston's fish owl measures 60 to 72 cm (24 to 28 in) in total length, and thus measures slightly less at average and maximum length than the great gray owl (Strix nebulosa), a species which has a significantly lower body mass. [6] [15] The Eurasian eagle-owl (B. bubo) is sometimes considered the largest overall living owl species.
Eastern grass owl: Tyto longimembris (Jerdon, 1839) 17 Itombwe owl: Tyto prigoginei (Schouteden, 1952) 18 Oriental bay owl: Phodilus badius (Horsfield, 1821) 19 Sri Lanka bay owl: Phodilus assimilis Hume, 1877: 20 Papuan hawk-owl: Uroglaux dimorpha (Salvadori, 1874) 21 Laughing owl (X) Ninox albifacies (Gray, GR, 1844) 22 Rufous owl: Ninox rufa ...
The average clutch size, attributed as 2.7, was the lowest of any European owl per one study. One species was attributed with an even lower clutch size in North America, the great grey owl with a mean of 2.6, but the mean clutch size was much higher for the same species in Europe, at 4.05. [111]
The only eagle-owl species in range that approaches its size is the Shelley's eagle-owl (Ketupa shelleyi), which may (but is not confirmed to) co-exist with the Verreaux's in northern Cameroon and the southern sliver of the Central African Republic most likely in forest edge and mosaics, but that species is a much darker sooty colour overall ...
It has been claimed that the Owl can accelerate from 0-97 km/h (60 mph) in 1.72 seconds, 0-100 km/h (62 mph) in 1.9 seconds, 0-186 mph (300 km/h) in 10.6 seconds, and can attain a top speed of 413 km/h (257 mph), which would make it the fastest accelerating production car in the world.