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  2. American barn owl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_barn_owl

    The American barn owl is a medium-sized, pale-coloured owl with long wings and a short, squarish tail. [3] However, the largest-bodied race of barn owl, T. f. furcata from Cuba and Jamaica, is also an island race, albeit being found on more sizeable islands with larger prey and few larger owls competing for dietary resources. [4]

  3. Barn owl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barn_owl

    New Caledonian barn owl Tyto letocarti, extinct, from the island of New Caledonia in Melanesia Index of animals with the same common name This page is an index of articles on animal species (or higher taxonomic groups) with the same common name ( vernacular name).

  4. Tytonidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tytonidae

    The barn owl is relatively common throughout most of its range and not considered globally threatened. If considered as a single global species, the barn owl is the second most widely distributed of all raptors, after only the peregrine falcon. It is wider-ranging than the also somewhat cosmopolitan osprey.

  5. Eastern barn owl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_barn_owl

    When large numbers of small prey are readily available, barn owl populations can expand rapidly. König proposed that Tyto alba delicatula should be split off as a separate species, to be known as the eastern barn owl, which would include the subspecies T. d. sumbaensis, T. d. meeki, T. d. crassirostris and T. d. interposita. [2]

  6. Prey detection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prey_detection

    Prey detection is the process by which predators are able to ... for which advantageous mutations are constantly preserved by natural selection. ... The barn owl ...

  7. Western barn owl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Barn_Owl

    It has an effortless wavering flight as it quarters the ground, alert to the sounds made by potential prey. Like most owls, the barn owl flies silently; tiny serrations on the leading edges of its flight feathers and a hairlike fringe to the trailing edges help to break up the flow of air over the wings, thereby reducing turbulence and the ...

  8. Plucking post - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plucking_post

    Many owls use plucking posts for prey that has been caught on the ground. Barred owls often use old nests for the purpose. [2] Plucking posts are used by barn owls which hunt by flying low and slowly over an area of open ground, hovering over spots that conceal potential prey. The barn owl feeds primarily on small vertebrates, particularly rodents.

  9. Tyto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyto

    Puerto Rican barn owl (Tyto cavatica) found in Puerto Rico - may still have existed up to 1912; possibly a subspecies of the ashy-faced owl (Tyto glaucops) Noel's barn owl (Tyto noeli) found in Cuba; Rivero's barn owl (Tyto riveroi) found in Cuba; Cuban barn owl (Tyto sp.) found in Cuba; Hispaniolan barn owl (Tyto ostologa) found in Hispaniola