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Lechuzita Vizcachera

Athene cunicularia

Description:

Athene cunicularia es un búho o mochuelo de unos 23 cm de largo. Tiene ojos amarillos, y cejas blancas. El dorso es castaño oscuro moteado de blanco. Una banda blanca atraviesa la garganta. El pecho y el vientre son blancuzcos con barras pardas. Las patas son muy largas y la cola corta. Tiene hábitos terrestres, anida en madrigueras y caza planeando, a menudo de día. Se alimenta de reptiles pequeños e insectos.

Habitat:

The burrowing owl routinely nests and lives underground (2) (5). Although fully capable of excavating its own burrow, the burrowing owl most commonly occupies the abandoned burrows of mammals (2). In the northern part of its range it commonly uses the burrows of prairie dogs, while in South America, as noted by the famous naturalist Charles Darwin, it inhabits burrows made by large, rabbit-like rodents called viscachas (6). Interestingly, burrowing owls purposefully deposit piles of mammal dung around the entrance of their burrows. This unusual behaviour has been shown to be a method of baiting, as the dung attracts numerous dung beetles, which the owl then feeds upon (7). Aside from invertebrates, the burrowing owl will also take small mammals, birds and reptiles, either pursing its prey on foot or diving down upon it from the air or a perch (2). Outside the breeding season, this species rests in its burrow during the day and mainly hunts at dusk, during the night, and at dawn. During breeding, however, burrowing owls may forage at any point during the day or night (2) (4). During the spring breeding season, burrowing owls form monogamous pairs, which maintain a small territory comprising the nesting burrow and the immediate surroundings. The female lays a clutch of up to 11 eggs, which are incubated for around one month, while the male brings food. In the initial period after hatching, the female remains with the young and is supported by the male, but as the young become more developed the female leaves the burrow and assists the male in foraging for food. After around 44 days the young leave the burrow and join the parent birds on hunting flights (2). While many burrowing owl breeding pairs remain resident around a burrow throughout the year, individuals from Canada and the northern USA are migratory. At the end of the breeding season, pairs in these regions split up and fly south to overwinter, before returning in the following spring and establishing a new breeding pair with a different partner (2).

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3 Comments

Maria dB
Maria dB 9 years ago

Muy hermosa contribucion al Proyecto Noah - bienvenido!

The MnMs
The MnMs 9 years ago

¡Muy bonita!

Ava T-B
Ava T-B 9 years ago

Welcome to Project Noah, juandwilches,
I hope you like the site as much we do; there are many features you can explore:
I invite you to go to http://www.projectnoah.org/faq where you will find the purpose and “rules” of Project Noah.
There is a blog http://blog.projectnoah.org/ where we post articles from spotters with special insight into different organisms.
There are also the chats for help with identification, and to comment on your own and others’ spottings.
Look at the global and local missions to put your spottings into:http://www.projectnoah.org/missions
Enjoy yourself here, see you around!

juandwilches
Spotted by
juandwilches

Meta, Colombia

Spotted on Jun 20, 2014
Submitted on Feb 1, 2015

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