canberrabirds

FW: [Birding-Aus] Do Powerful Owls eat carrion?

To: "" <>
Subject: FW: [Birding-Aus] Do Powerful Owls eat carrion?
From: Philip Veerman <>
Date: Mon, 21 Mar 2016 11:51:01 +0000
For what it is worth, this (below) is the correspondence on birding-aus that 
raised this question.

Good Point Philip


I have only seen possums and birds under their feeding/roost tree a few years 
back when I knew where it was.  I still find many possum entrails which appear 
to be from the local Powerful Owl.  I have never seen any terrestrial 
vertebrates at all.  In fact there was a dead Sugar Glider on the ground in his 
territory the other day - untouched.

Cheers

Mike

> -----Original Message-----> From: Philip Veerman 
>  > Sent: Monday, 21 March 2016 1:20 PM> To: 
> 'Tony Russell'; 'Michael Norris'; > Subject: RE: 
> [Birding-Aus] Do Powerful Owls eat carrion?
>
> I suspect Tony missed the point of the question. Or maybe I have. Or is the 
> question about whether possums are made sick from eating rat poison (or even 
> poisoned rats). I think the question is concern for the owls if they eat dead 
> poisoned rats. We know that Powerful Owls eat possums so that point is far 
> from "impossumble" (ha ha). At this month's COG meeting Jerry Olsen talked 
> about local raptors and made the point that Powerful Owls eat only animals 
> caught in the tree level (arboreal). They are not interested in eating rats 
> or other terrestrial fauna. Terrestrial fauna apparently does not show in 
> their pellets. Whether that is consistent throughout their range (well it 
> likely is). So I would suggest on that, that the threat of poisoning from 
> eating dead rats should be minimal to nonexistent. How would they find it? 
> Although there is the recent photo of a PO holding shorts at a day time roost 
> (presumably caught off someone's clothes line).
>
> Philip
>
> -----Original Message-----From: Birding-Aus 
>  On Behalf Of Tony Russell
> Sent: Monday, 21 March 2016 11:26 AM  To: 'Michael Norris'; 
>        Subject: Re: [Birding-Aus] Do Powerful Owls 
> eat carrion?
>
> I think you'll find it not impossumble that the owl had possumbly killed the 
> possae.
>
> Tony.
>
> -----Original Message-----From: Birding-Aus 
>  On Behalf Of Michael Norris  
> Sent: Monday, March 21, 2016 10:12 AM   To:  
> Subject: [Birding-Aus] Do Powerful Owls eat carrion?
>
> The other day I saw a Powerful Owl near my home in suburban Melbourne, 16km 
> from the CBD.  It was in a garden where a number of possums have been found 
> dead so I’d like to know if these owls eat carrion.   My concern is that 
> current rat baits can accumulate in the bodies of vertebrates that scavenge 
> on corpses.
>
> Michael Norris
>
-----Original Message-----From: Birding-Aus 
 On Behalf Of Philip Veerman    
Sent: Monday, 21 March 2016 1:20 PM     To: 'Tony Russell'; 'Michael Norris'; 
       Subject: Re: [Birding-Aus] Do Powerful Owls 
eat carrion?

I suspect Tony missed the point of the question. Or maybe I have. Or is the 
question about whether possums are made sick from eating rat poison (or even 
poisoned rats). I think the question is concern for the owls if they eat dead 
poisoned rats. We know that Powerful Owls eat possums so that point is far from 
"impossumble" (ha ha). At this month's COG meeting Jerry Olsen talked about 
local raptors and made the point that Powerful Owls eat only animals caught in 
the tree level (arboreal). They are not interested in eating rats or other 
terrestrial fauna. Terestrail fauna apparently does not show in their pellets. 
Whether that is consistent throughout their range (well it likely is). So I 
would suggest on that, that the threat of poisoning from eating dead rats 
should be minimal to nonexistent. How would they find it? Although there is the 
recent photo of a PO holding shorts at a day time roost (presumably caught off 
someone's clothes line).

Philip

-----Original Message-----From: Birding-Aus 
 On Behalf Of Tony Russell
Sent: Monday, 21 March 2016 11:26 AM    To: 'Michael Norris'; 
       Subject: Re: [Birding-Aus] Do Powerful Owls 
eat carrion?

I think you'll find it not impossumble that the owl had possumbly killed the 
possae.

Tony.

-----Original Message-----From: Birding-Aus 
 On Behalf Of Michael Norris    
Sent: Monday, March 21, 2016 10:12 AM   To:  
Subject: [Birding-Aus] Do Powerful Owls eat carrion?

The other day I saw a Powerful Owl near my home in suburban Melbourne, 16km 
from the CBD.  It was in a garden where a number of possums have been found 
dead so I’d like to know if these owls eat carrion.   My concern is that 
current rat baits can accumulate in the bodies of vertebrates that scavenge on 
corpses.

Michael Norris



*******************************************************************************************************
This is the email announcement and discussion list of the Canberra 
Ornithologists Group.
Emails posted to the list that exceed 200 kB in size, including attachments, 
will be rejected.
All emails distributed via the list are archived at 
http://bioacoustics.cse.unsw.edu.au/archives/html/canberrabirds. It is a 
condition of list membership that you agree to your contributions being 
archived.
When subscribing or unsubscribing, please insert the word 'Subscribe' or 
'Unsubscribe', as applicable, in the email's subject line.
List-Post: <>
List-Help: <>
List-Unsubscribe: <>
List-Subscribe: <>
List manager: David McDonald, email <>


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • FW: [Birding-Aus] Do Powerful Owls eat carrion?, Philip Veerman <=
Admin

The University of NSW School of Computer and Engineering takes no responsibility for the contents of this archive. It is purely a compilation of material sent by many people to the Canberra Ornithologists Group mailing list. It has not been checked for accuracy nor its content verified in any way. If you wish to get material removed from the archive or have other queries about the list contact David McDonald, list manager, phone (02) 6231 8904 or email . If you can not contact David McDonald e-mail Andrew Taylor at this address: andrewt@cse.unsw.EDU.AU