Barn owls can hear so well that they can hunt with high accuracy in total darkness by homing in on the footsteps and nibbling sounds that rodents make. Some researchers believe that they can actually tell what type and size of rodent they are hearing.

Barn Owl Biology

Scientists believe that the barn owl originated as a dweller in high clay cliffs of Europe and this may be one reason why the birds prefer the vertical walls of manmade structures even over trees. There may be other advantages in "owning" a barn, particularly in the winter. Long periods of heavy snow can result in high mortalities in barn owl populations since their prey is too far beneath the snow to catch. But a barn may provide an available supply of rodents during these periods, allowing the resident barn owls to survive.

Highly successful, the barn owl spread through all the known continents, and morphed into 35 subspecies, some of them confined to single island chains.  The two best known races are the Barn Owl of Europe, Tyto alba alba, and the North American Barn Owl, Tyto alba pratincola. For a list of all known subspecies and where they live, go to our Barn Owls Around the World Page.


PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

  • Barn owls share a number of traits with other owls: large eyes, well-developed facial disks, soft feathering for silent flight, cervical bones that allow the head to turn 180 degrees, and four sharply clawed toes, one of which can be turned forward or backward.
  • Barn owls are medium sized owls, standing approximately 10 to 12 inches high, and despite their size, they are exceedingly light, weighing about a pound (454 grams).
  • Barn Owl Physical CharacteristicsAlthough female barn owls tend to have darker plumage and males tend to be whiter, this is only a generality and not a surefire way of determining sex.
  • Although the barn owl can not see in total darkness, it can still fly very well in darkness so dim that a human could not navigate.
  • They can hear so well that they can hunt with high accuracy in total darkness by homing in on the footsteps and nibbling sounds that rodents make. Some researchers believe that they can actually tell what type and size of rodent they are hearing.
  • The reason that barn owls bob and weave their heads is to gain depth perception
  • Although they are most noted for their high-pitched scream, barn owls produce a number of sounds: from the hen and young “snoring” in the nest to chirps, twitters, and tongue clicks—some used for bonding, begging for food, mating rituals, and danger warnings.
  • Barn owls typically hunt three times per night: near dusk, midnight, and dawn. These are the best times to observe them on the wing.

BEHAVIOR

  • They tend to habitually perch in the same spot—usually in the same area they breed, and are known to remain quite still.
  • When they do not perch inside buildings, they most often use thickly grown evergreens and, despite their pale plumage, are exceedingly difficult to spot.
  • Barn Owls most often hunt at dusk, midnight, and dawn, but in times of hunger may hunt in broad daylightThey tend to be less territorial than other raptors, and numerous instances of communal nesting have been recorded, one of the most notable when over 30 birds were found living in an abandoned steel mill in Utah.
  • They most often hunt at dusk, midnight, and dawn, but in times of hunger may hunt in broad daylight.
  • They will often kill more than they can eat and stockpile food for later.
  • Barn owls produce about two pellets per day. These are the indigestible parts—the fur and bones of the animals they eat, compressed into an oblong shape in their crop
  • In some areas of the world, barn owls prey primarily on bats, birds, insects, and lizards, and have been seen successfully hauling fish from lakes and streams.

BREEDING AND DEVELOPMENT

  • Although they are strongly associated with nesting in barns, these owls also will use hollow trees, and in the western United States will nest in gullies and have even been known to hollow out a bank with their feet.
  • Eggs are dull white and elliptical, and are usually laid at two to three days intervals. Clutch size is often large for a raptor—up to 13 eggs have been found in one nest, and 11 chicks in another. Three to seven is more common.
  • Barn Owl Breeding and DevelopmentEggs take between 29 and 34 days to hatch.
  • The eyes of the chicks remain closed for about 12 days.
  • The young take approximately 8 weeks to fledge.
  • Quills emerge at around 13 days.
  • At 28 days, the tail feathers emerge and the iris turns from yellow to brown.
  • By 35 days, the birds begin to wander around the nest; the eldest may peer out of the entrance hole.
  • The young begin to wander from the nest between 5 and 8 weeks old, but generally can not fly well until their 8th week.
  • Once fledged, young barn owls suffer a high mortality—studies have consistently shown between 60 and 80 percent perish in their first year.
  • Fledglings in the northern United States tend to disperse wide and far before the winter—some birds travel over a thousand miles, and the predominant direction is south. In the spring, some birds show a tendency to return toward their natal area.
  • Barn owls can reproduce when one year old.

STATUS IN THE UNITED STATES

  • In North America, the barn owl inhabits almost every state. Prior to European settlement, barn owls were rare in the northern states, but as the forests were cleared for farmland, the barn owl became a common frequenter of barns and farmlands.
  • Since the 1950's, barn owl populations have declined in many north-central states. This is due to a variety of factors including the destruction of grasslands and wetlands, the replacement of wooden barns by metal barns, and the practice by modern farmers to do away with hedgerows and wild areas on their farms.
  • Now, many states are attempting to bring back their grasslands and wetlands, and the barn owl may very well start recovering in these areas. The erection of nest boxes is an important part of barn owl conservation efforts.

Barn Owl Facts

Although barn owls tend to breed in the early spring, they have been recorded breeding in every month of the year, even in states as far north as Pennsylvania. Not only is this unusual behavior for other owls, it is unusual for birds of any kind.

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Other names for the barn owl are Ghost Owl, White Owl, Night Owl, Hissing Owl, Monkey-faced Owl, Church Owl, Death Owl, Rat Owl, Demon Owl, and Golden Owl.

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Barn owls are the most widespread owl and one of the most widespread land birds in the world. They exist on every continent except Antarctica, and even inhabit many island chains where they have morphed into many subspecies.

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The barn owl is highly adaptive to prey availability. In Spain the barn owl hunts mostly house mice. In Austria they have been known to take bats. In some areas of the midwestern United States they have taken good numbers of red-winged blackbirds. And on a few occasions, they have even been observed successfully catching fish.

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Recent research shows that young barn owls in the northern states disperse dramatically in the fall. In fact, some birds have flown as far as 1200 miles. But barn owls have traditionally been thought of as sedentary species, having been seen in winter by farmers around in barns going back for decades. It turns out that the young do disperse before their first winter, but it is the adults, who own good territory, that tend to stay.

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Despite standing over a foot tall with a three-foot wingspan, barn owls weigh only about a pound. This low ratio of weight to wing size allows the barn owl to fly slowly and deliberately over fields while it searches by sight and sound for its prey below.

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Spearheaded by the University of Tel Aviv, Israel has one of the most robust barn owl nest box projects in the world. Communal farms have reported such success with erecting hundreds of nest boxes around the country that Israel’s Ministry of Agriculture has decided to fund and expand the project.

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Barn owls can hear so well that researchers believe they can distinguish which species of rodents they are hearing from the sounds the rodents make as they run along the ground. In one study, it was found that barn owls were capturing pregnant voles at a much higher ratio than existed in the population, showing that they were selecting the fatter voles over the others—most likely through their keen auditory senses.

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For the pocket gopher… barn owls…can represent a substantial biological control that can be manipulated with the placement of barn owl nest boxes around and in the orchard. Research work in California examined contents of barn owl nest boxes in the San Joaquin and Sacramento Valley around prunes, vines and pecans. Results showed pocket gophers represented over 50 percent of the barn owl diet representing an average of 215 gophers ‘taken’ during the breeding and nestling phase….” California Fish and Wildlife Service

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