Barn Owl Images, Facts and Information:
Tyto alba
- Barn Owls are medium sized, secretive, nocturnal owls with dark eyes and white to tawny feathers.
- In North America Barn Owls breed from northwestern to northeastern U.S. south to Mexico and are year round residents in all but the very northern most areas of their range.
- Barn Owls are declining in parts of their range due to habitat loss. In some Midwestern states they are endangered due to modern farming practices.
- Barn Owls provide excellent rodent control and having them locally should be encouraged. Do not use rodenticides when there are Barn Owls, it can kill them.
- Barn Owls eat small mammals including mice, rats, voles, lemmings and shrews, they also eat bats, rabbits and birds.
- Some research studies indicate that they eat twice as much prey as other owls for their weight.
- They lay between 2 to 18 eggs and the incubation period is 29 – 34 days, The female incubates.
- Barn Owls will nest in human structures including nest boxes, barns, old abandoned buildings and hay stacks. Natural nesting sites include holes in trees, caves, cliffs and crevices.
- Barn Owls have many nicknames which include monkey-faced owl, silver owl, white owl, delicate owl, golden owl, steeple owl, straw owl, barnyard owl, church owl, night owl, ghost owl, hobgoblin owl, screech owl, and death owl.
- Barn Owls can live up to 15 years.
I hope you enjoy viewing my Barn Owl photos.
Mia McPherson2020-02-22T09:14:15-06:00
Frost covered Barn Owl
Title: Frost covered Barn Owl
Location: Farmington Bay WMA, Davis County, Utah
Date: 12/19/2009
Mia McPherson2021-12-18T05:34:40-06:00
Barn Owl covered in hoar frost
Title: Barn Owl covered in hoar frost
Location: Farmington Bay WMA, Davis County, Utah
Date: 12/19/2009