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An interesting item about urban owls

To: "'L&L Knight'" <>, "'Birding Aus'" <>
Subject: An interesting item about urban owls
From: "David Kowalick" <>
Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 09:54:35 +0930
Interesting point this story makes and one that seems to be repeated here in
Oz. The inner city parks often have plenty of large old trees that provide
ideal hunting grounds and roosting sites for owls. Botanic Gardens in Sydney
and Melbourne often provide opportunity to see powerful owls, or the gardens
in the tropics seem to similarly make for excellent rufous owl territory.
Incidentally, I saw a powerful owl in Fitzroy gardens off the end of
Flinders Street in Melbourne last week. Apparently it has been making a meal
of the local possum population. Very impressive bird and the so-called
'uber-forest' appears to be ideal. I was visiting from Adelaide so the
opportunity to see a powerful owl was serendipitous. 

-----Original Message-----
From: 
 On Behalf Of L&L Knight
Sent: Friday, 19 October 2007 9:46 AM
To: Birding Aus
Subject: An interesting item about urban owls

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2007-10/uonc-edc101607.php

Ecologists discover city is 'uber-forest' for big owls
Public release date: 16-Oct-2007

It may be news to its bankers, but Charlotte, the biggest city in North 
Carolina and a major center of the American financial industry, is 
actually an old growth forest.

At least that's the way the barred owls see it. .

Charlotte is famous for having two kinds of green. It is home to two of 
the nation's largest banks and its downtown residential neighborhoods 
and near-suburbs are also known for their lush yards and green streets, 
lined with large trees.  Less well-known is the fact that the city is 
almost as well populated with large owls - particularly barred owls - 
as it is with bankers. Harry Potter would feel very much at home.

In fact, the barred owl population in Charlotte is so strong that the 
city was chosen to be the site for the most extensive barred owl 
research study that has ever been attempted, with fieldwork going on in 
the manicured front lawns and gardened back yards of urban and suburban 
neighborhoods.

Urban wildlife numbers have been increasing in recent decades, notably 
in populations of squirrels, Canada geese, raccoons and deer, but the 
appearance of significant urban populations of barred owls, the third 
largest owl species in the US, is a surprise to many biologists.

"If you read about barred owls in the textbooks, it says they need 
large stands of old-growth forest to survive," notes University of 
North Carolina at Charlotte ecologist and ornithologist Rob 
Bierregaard, who has directed the six-year-old research study. "Either 
the barred owls in Charlotte haven't read that book or the book is 
wrong, because they are really here and apparently doing quite well."

"We have concluded is that there may be a third possibility: that old 
suburban neighborhoods in fact are an old growth forest, at least as 
far as the barred owls are concerned."

Bierregaard's study has now found and monitored more than 200 nesting 
attempts by 78 different pairs in both suburban Charlotte and the 
surrounding countryside, but the project began when he first considered 
doing a study of barn owls, which are common in farm country, as a 
thesis project for a graduate student. A team of volunteers was 
necessary to support the effort and, unfortunately, they all lived in 
the city -- a long drive from the proposed rural study sites.

In order to accommodate the volunteers, the researchers pragmatically 
changed the target species and put up nest boxes in the wooded suburban 
neighborhood where the volunteers lived. Barred owls, they discovered, 
were common there.

"Barred owls need old growth forest because they need trees big enough 
to have holes to nest in," Bierregaard noted. "They also need a pretty 
open understory, because their hunting technique is to sit on a branch 
and wait for something to move. If you have a young forest with a 
really thick undergrowth, they are not going to be able to see enough 
to hunt.

"When you look at suburban Charlotte, what do we have? We've got giant 
old willow oak trees with plenty of holes in them and we've got mowed 
lawns and azalea bushes, which is a very open understory, so they can 
see a long way. The habitat is an 'uber' old growth forest for owls 
because the understory is so open and there are plenty of birdfeeders 
to attract prey."

The research study, which began in 2001 and has been sponsored by the 
Carolina Raptor Center, has been large-scale and in-depth, with 
researchers monitoring about 40 nesting sites each year and tracking 
many sets of young as they mature through attached radio transmitters. 
Using radio telemetry, the team has mapped out a dozen or so owl 
territories in south Charlotte, each of which is about 200 acres in 
size. Locating the birds and their nests, normally a very difficult 
task in wild forests, has been greatly simplified thanks to the 
reporting of ordinary Charlotteans, who apparently love their city's 
owls.

"Probably half the nests we've found because someone either called in 
to the Raptor Center and reported young on the ground or we're 
wandering around a neighborhood with a tape recorder playing owl calls 
and someone will ask  'what are you doing?'  I'll explain and they'll 
say 'there's a pair three blocks over that way.' Since they are so 
vocal, you can't be around a barred owl nest and not know it," 
Bierregaard said.

Though amused to see the biologists afield in their yards, the 
Charlotte community seems to have eagerly embraced the project. "Pretty 
much everybody knows us when they see us and the antennas," he said. 
"There aren't many neighborhoods where we haven't been."

Public enthusiasm and interest aside, some very serious science is 
going on in people's backyards. One of the most important ecological 
questions that the study is close to answering is the question of 
whether or not the barred owls are really as successful in Charlotte as 
they appear to be.

The answer to the question of whether or not the city's many owls have 
been able to be at home is not as obvious as it would seem on the 
surface. For example, the cooper's hawk, another raptor known to be 
common in cities like Charlotte, has been shown not to be able to breed 
successfully in the urban environment by a recent scientific study.

"Coopers hawks are drawn by the food," Bierregaard notes.  "Everyone's 
got birdfeeders up and a birdfeeder is just a two-step hawk feeding 
platform. The local Coopers hawks have these kamikaze raids where they 
will fly though a neighborhood at full speed and they will come around 
a corner where they know there's a birdfeeder and just see what flies 
up in front of them. It is like they are trap-lining the local 
birdfeeders."

The visiting hawks are not as successful, however, when it comes to 
nesting. Cities abound with pigeons and doves, which are good prey for 
hawks but often carry a microbial parasite that is fatal to the hawks' 
young. The urban environment thus creates an ecological condition known 
as a "sink" - the area looks friendly to the birds but is really 
causing a net loss to the overall hawk population. Birds are attracted 
into the area but are not able to replace themselves in the next 
generation.

The situation of barred owls in Charlotte is very different, 
Bierregaard and his students believe. Though their findings are not 
fully complete, the researchers have so far found that the urban barred 
owls are able to reproduce effectively - perhaps significantly more 
effectively than in wild forests - because their rate of reproduction 
exceeds their rate of mortality. In the city, owl death tends to happen 
either from disease or from cars, the owls' most serious predator.

The researchers have attached miniaturized radio transmitters to young 
owls. The ecologists then track the movements of the owls as they 
mature and note where they finally settle among the network of 
well-mapped territories and nesting sites, establishing a kind of 
on-going community history of the owl population in south Charlotte.

"If you see an owl in south Charlotte, chances are we know it by name," 
said Bierregaard. "There's a location in Lata Park, for example, that 
has apparently had barred owls almost forever. But just since we've 
been studying that pair, it has been replaced by a completely new pair. 
Three years ago, the male died - he was replaced. The next year, the 
female died - the male raised the young as a single dad - and then the 
next year the female was replaced. If we didn't have radios and know 
those birds, nobody would have known that they were new birds. It's 
been amazing how quickly they are replaced."

Bierregaard notes that Charlotte wasn't always such prime owl habitat. 
A hundred years ago when the city was much smaller, most of the current 
residential area was farmland - open country with few trees that would 
be suitable for barred owl nests. As the land was sold for residential 
neighborhoods, trees were planted which eventually grew to old growth 
forest size and, apparently, the owls moved in.

Now, as newer suburban continue to mature, the owl habitat is steadily 
expanding. "As the farms have been abandoned, the new neighborhoods 
that replaced them have planted trees," he said. "If you wait long 
enough, the barred owls are going to expand their territory, as the 
trees start to grow up in the newer suburban neighborhoods."

Other mysteries of urban owl life are beginning to emerge, including 
the question of what it is that city birds most like to eat - squirrel 
or cardinal, crawfish or koi? In the last couple of seasons the 
researchers have installed video recorders in some of the nest boxes, 
and Cori Cauble, one of Bierregaard's graduate students, has been 
researching a thesis on the owl's food habits and how they compare to 
owls in the wild.

Before the video cameras, the researchers had noted the prominence of 
bird feathers in the nest boxes, but were unwilling to draw any 
conclusions because they noted that feathers were more likely to be 
left and preserved from kills than other kinds of remains. The videos 
of owl home life answered the question.

"We scaled back our estimation on how important birds are in their diet 
until the first day we had a video camera in a box: they brought in 
eight prey items and four were birds. That result has held - for two 
years we have had cameras in four or five different nests. They have 
diverse diets, depending on territory," he noted. "We have one nest we 
call the 'sushi box' because they bring in so many fresh fish, but even 
there the owls bring in a lot of birds."

All-in-all, the researchers think a picture is emerging of barred owls 
that are nearly as happy in cities as people are, though like the 
humans, they hate and fear the traffic, and living space is at a 
premium.

"The biggest source of mortality in an urban environment is flying into 
cars," Bierregaard noted.  "We've had a couple die of diseases, but for 
most of the birds that we have had tagged, where we know how they died, 
they flew into a car. But it seems that mortality even from that isn't 
that high.

"It certainly seems that they are cranking out enough young to more 
than make up the difference. We are getting to the point now where 
young that we radio-tagged back in 2002 are having young. It's neat to 
watch how the young birds that we tagged wander around and find a spot 
where there is a vacancy, where a bird has died. There are enough birds 
floating around that when a bird dies, that spot is filled really 
quickly."

In the world of urban owls, it would appear, there is no downturn in 
the real estate market.

###

To see further information about the south Charlotte barred owl study,  
see the web pages at: 
http://www.bioweb.uncc.edu/bierregaard/barred_owls.htm

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