Habitat: The flammulated owl
normally is not found in cutover forests or in pure stands of conifers but
requires some understory or intermixture of oaks in the forest (Phillips et al.
1964). It occurs in ponderosa pine, spruce-fir, lodgepole pine, aspen, and
pinyon-juniper forest types (Grinnell and Miller 1944, Karalus and Eckert
1974).Nest: Nests are usually located in abandoned flicker or other woodpecker holes, but flammulated owls may take over occupied nests (Karalus and Eckert 1974). Their nests have been reported in pine, oak, and aspen snags (Bent 1938). Food: The flammulated owl is almost entirely insectivorous, but it occasionally captures small mammals and birds. In the few stomachs that have been examined, items reported were various beetles, moths, grasshoppers, crickets, caterpillars, ants, other insects, spiders, and scorpions (Bent 1938). Kenyon (1947) examined the stomach contents of one owl and found 4 crane flies, 1 caddisfly, 7 moths, 11 harvestman spiders, and 1 long-horned grasshopper; the bird had apparently choked to death on the grasshopper.
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Habitat: The hawk owl inhabits much
of the northern poplar, spruce, pine, birch, tamarac, and willow forests where
such forests are broken by small prairie burns and bogs (Henderson
1919).Nest: Hawk owls usually nest in natural cavities or in enlarged holes of pileated woodpeckers and flickers. Nests have been reported in birch, spruce, tamarac, poplar snags (Henderson 1919, 1925, Bent 1938), and occasionally on cliffs or in crow's nests. Food: This owl hunts extensively during the day and feeds on small mammals, birds, and insects (Bent 1938). Mendall (1944) examined 21 hawk owl stomachs; all contained meadow or redbacked mice; two owls had also fed on shrews.
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Habitat: The pygmy owl is found in
most of the western wooded areas from western Canada into Mexico. It is
probably most abundant in open coniferous or mixed forests and is reported
specifically in ponderosa pine, mixed conifer, and fir-redwood-cedar
forests.Nest: This owl usually nests in old woodpecker holes ranging in size from those constructed by hairy woodpeckers up to and including those of the flickers from 8 to 75 feet above ground (Bent 1938). Food: Mice and large insects are probably the most common prey of the pygmy owl, although other small mammals, birds, amphibians, and reptiles have been reported (Bent 1938). Brock (1958) found one vole, a deer mouse, and a Jerusalem cricket in the stomach of one bird and reported seeing another pygmy owl take a Nuttall's woodpecker. We observed one pygmy owl in Arizona carrying a small vole. They have also been observed taking mice in the mountains west of Denver, and taking birds in the vicinity of feeders in Boulder, Colorado (Richard Pillmore pers. comma3). 3 Wildlife biologist, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Fort Collins, Colorado.
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Habitat: This uncommon small owl
inhabits the saguaro cactus in Sonoran deserts and wooded river bottoms near
the Mexican border.Nest: Nests are in abandoned woodpecker holes in mesquite, cottonwood, and saguaro cactus. Nest heights range from 10 to 40 feet above ground (Bent 1938, Karalus and Eckert 1974). Food: The diet of the ferruginous owl consists primarily of small birds; however, insects, small mammals, invertebrates, reptiles, and amphibians are occasionally eaten (Karalus and Eckert 1974).
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Habitat: The elf owl is restricted
to the southwestern United States where it is found primarily in the saguaro
cactus deserts, bottomland sycamore and cottonwood stands and in
conifer-hardwood forests at high elevations.Nest: One of the most common nest sites of the elf owl is in old woodpecker holes in saguaro cactus. It has also been reported nesting in cavities in sycamore, walnut, mesquite, and pine trees (Ligon 1967, Bent 1938, Hayes and James 1963). Cavities are usually located in snags or in dead branches of living trees. Food: Elf owls feed almost entirely on insects, particularly beetles, moths, and crickets. They also feed on centipedes and scorpions and have been reported to take an occasional reptile (Ligon 1967).
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Habitat: Barred owls are common in
southern swamps and moist river bottoms of the Midwest, and less common but
widespread in northern forests. These owls are found in all of the eastern
forest types. Although they use white pine, these large owls prefer oak woods
and mixed hardwood-conifer stands (Nicholls and Warner 1972). Preferred oak
woods contain dead and dying trees for cavities and are free of dense
understory, thus facilitating unobstructed flying and attacking of
prey.Nest: Natural cavities in hollow trees are preferred by barred owls. If these are unavailable, deserted crow, raptor, or squirrel nests are occasionally used (Pearson 1936, Bent 1938). Hollow trees used usually have hunting perches with good views. Recommended nest box size is 13 x 15 x 16 inches deep, with an entrance hole 8 inches in diameter (Hamerstrom 1972). Nest boxes will have a better chance of being used if they are placed near woods and streams. Food: Barred owls are nocturnal hunters. More than half of the food items taken in western Missouri consisted of meadow mice, cottontail rabbits, and cotton rats (Korschgen and Stuart 1972).
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Habitat: This uncommon owl occurs
in most old-age conifer associations in the western United States. Forsman
(1976) located 123 pairs in Oregon, and 95 percent occupied undisturbed
old-growth conifer forests. Karalus and Eckert (1974) described the habitat as
being dense fir forests, heavily wooded cliffsides, narrow canyons, and
sometimes stream valleys well stocked with oak, sycamore, willow, cottonwood,
and alder.Nest: Forsman (1976) found spotted owls nesting in the holes of living old-growth conifers, particularly Douglas-fir. Nest trees typically had secondary crowns and broken tops caused by parasite infection. Cavities were located inside the tops of hollow trunks 62 to 180 feet above ground. Dunn (1901) reported spotted owls nesting in cavities in live and dead oak and sycamore trees. Spotted owls also nest in cavities in cliffs, and occasionally in abandoned nests of other large birds (Bent 1938). Food: The major food items of the spotted owl are mammals and birds, with occasional insects and amphibians. Forsman (1976) found that mammals made up 90 percent of the total biomass taken; the major prey species were flying squirrels and wood rats. Marshall (1942) examined 23 pellets and stomach contents of 5 spotted owls and found 6 bats, 4 mice, 31 crickets, 12 flying squirrels, 1 mole, 1 shrew, 4 songbirds, 2 smaller owls, and 1 amphibian.
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Habitat: This northern owl is
normally found in the mixed conifer-hardwood forests of Canada (Peterson 1961).
One juvenile reported in Colorado during August suggests that this owl may nest
in the southern Rocky Mountains (Bailey and Niedrach 1965). Boreal owls are
confined to evergreen woods and dense alder, white pine, and spruce
forests.Nest: Old flicker and pileated woodpecker holes are preferred, usually at a height of 10 to 25 feet (Fisher 1893, Preble 1908, Tufts 1925, Lawrence 1932). Conifer snags seems to be preferred for nest trees, although hardwoods have been used (Bent 1938). Food: The main portion of the boreal owl's diet consists of small rodents. Mendall (1944) examined the contents of 20 stomachs in Maine and found 73 percent mice (chiefly meadow voles) and 20 percent short-tailed shrews. Pigeons and grasshoppers made up the remaining 7 percent. In Ontario, Catling (1972) found 86.2 percent meadow voles, 5.6 percent deer mice, 4.2 percent star-nosed moles, 2.7 percent masked shrews, and 1.4 percent short-tailed shrews. Small birds, bats, insects, amphibians, and reptiles are also occasionally eaten (Karalus and Eckert 1974).
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Habitat: Saw-whet owls
are small, nocturnal hunters of the deep north woods. They nest in the Rocky
Mountains up to about 11,000 feet (Bailey and Niedrach 1965). This widely
distributed owl nests in most of the forest types throughout the northern half
of the United States, but only rarely do they nest as far south as central
Missouri.Nest: These small owls prefer to nest in old flicker or other woodpecker holes (Bent 1938). Nesting habitat may be improving in areas where Dutch Elm disease has infested many elms, and woodpeckers have drilled nest holes (Hamerstrom 1972). Saw-whets will use nesting boxes if sawdust or straw is provided. Nest boxes should be 6 x 6 x 9 inches with a 2.5-inch entrance hole (Hamerstrom 1972). Food: Saw-whet owls consume mostly small mammals and insects. Specific food items include mice, shrews, young squirrels, chipmunks, bats, beetles, grasshoppers, and occasionally small birds (Scott and Patton 1975, Burton 1973. Hamerstrom 1972, Bent 1938).
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Habitat: Chimney swifts are found
throughout the eastern half of the United States in wooded and open areas. They
have adopted to man-made structures and are no longer dependent upon hollow
trees for nesting and roosting.Nest: Originally chimney swifts nested in hollow trees, especially sycamores. They now use chimneys, barn silos, cisterns, and wells (Pearson 1936). Their nests are made of twigs, which are glued to a vertical surface with saliva to form a "half-saucer" (Forbush and May 1939). Food: Chimney swifts feed almost entirely on flying insects but will sometimes take small caterpillars hanging from tree branches or leaves (Forbush and May 1939).
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Habitat: This small
swift is most likely to be found in river valleys among dense Douglas-fir and
redwood forests in the western United States.Nest: Nests are usually located in tall hollow snags in burned or logged areas and are made from twigs (Peterson 1961, Robbins et al. 1966). Nests have been reported in unused chimneys and under building eaves (Bent 1940). Food: Flying insects such as mosquitoes, gnats, flies, and small beetles captured in flight probably make up the entire diet (Bent 1940).
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Habitat:
Coppery-tailed trogons can be found along riparian streams and in pine-oak
forests in Arizona, southwestern New Mexico, and southern Texas.Nest: Nests are found 12 to 40 feet above the ground in deserted large woodpecker holes (Bent 1940). Cottonwood and sycamore snags are usually selected for nests. Of the 34 species in the family Trogonidae, this is the only one that breeds in the United States (Wetmore 1964). Food: There is little information on the food of these birds, but apparently both animal and vegetable matter are included in the diet. Bent (1940) reported on stomach contents of two birds. One contained adult and larvae of moths and butterflies; the other contained 68 percent insects and 32 percent fruits. Insect food included grasshoppers, praying mantids, stink bugs, leaf beetles, and larvae of hawk moth, sawfly, and miscellaneous other insects. Vegetable food consisted of fruits of cissus and red pepper and undetermined plant fiber.
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Habitat: Flickers are commonly found
near large trees in open woodlands, fields, and meadows throughout North
America. In winter, they occasionally seek shelter in coniferous woods or
swamps. Previously three species were recognized: the yellow-shafted of the
East, the red-shafted of the West, and the gilded of the southwestern desert.
These are now considered a single species.Nest: Flickers prefer to nest in open country or in lightly wooded suburban areas where park-like situations are plentiful (Bent 1939). Conner et al. (1975) reported that flickers usually nest in edge habitats and, in extensive forested areas, nest only in or around openings. Flickers excavate nest holes with a 2.75-inch entrance hole diameter in dead trees or dead limbs of many species of trees including aspen, cottonwood, oak, willow, sycamore, pine, and juniper. Nests are sometimes as high as 100 feet but usually between 10 and 30 feet (Scott and Patton 1975, Lawrence 1967). Food: Sixty percent of common flicker food is animal matter. Of this, 75 percent is ants, more than taken by any other North American bird. Some flicker stomachs have contained over 2,000 ants. The rest of the insect material includes beetles, wasps, caterpillars, grubs, and crickets. The vegetable portion of the diet includes weed seeds, cultivated grain, and the fruit of wild shrubs and trees (Bent 1939, Forbush and May 1939).
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Habitat: Forests of
heavy timber and secondary growth consisting of mixed deciduous and coniferous
trees are the preferred year-round habitat for pileated woodpeckers. These
large woodpeckers have become less abundant over much of their former range
where extensive agriculture or logging practices have eliminated large tracts
of old growth forests. In the Ozarks, they are plentiful wherever extensive
forests remain, preferring areas where past cutting practices , (early 1900's)
have left scattered large cull trees throughout.Nest: Pileated woodpecker nests have been found in beech, poplar, tulip-popular, birch, oak, hickory, maple, hemlock, pine, ash, elm, basswood, and aspen trees. Cavity heights range from 15 to 70 feet, with an entrance hole up to 4 inches in diameter (Hoyt 1941, 1957). Tall dead trees with smooth surfaces and few limbs are preferred. One tree may be used for several years, but rarely is a nest hole reused. This behavior provides cavities for other wildlife, including wood ducks, owls, and squirrels (Hoyt 1957). Timber stands with sawtimber of 15 to 18 inches dbh provide adequate habitat if there is a supply of dead and decaying trees (Conner et al. 1975). Food: Insects make up more than 70 percent of the food of pileated woodpeckers. Ants (especially carpenter ants) and beetles are the major food items. In the fall, dogwood berries, wild cherries, acorns, and other wild fruit are included in the diet (Bent 1939).
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Habitat: Red-bellied
woodpeckers are common throughout southeastern forest types. This bird has
habits similar to those of the red-headed woodpecker, except that the
red-headed prefers open woodlands, farm yards, and field edges whereas the
red-bellied prefers larger expanses of forest. Bailey and Niedrach (1965)
reported that the red-bellied woodpecker is extending its range westward up the
river valleys of the Great Plains.Nest: These woodpeckers most commonly excavate nest holes in dead limbs of living trees. Excavations were found in a wide variety of tree species, and ranged from 33 to 72 feet above ground (Reller 1972). Cavities are usually located in mature timber stands. Between September and January, males and females roost in separate holes. Often one of the roost holes (usually that of the female) becomes the nest site (Kilham 1958). Food: Although primarily insectivorous, red-bellied woodpeckers consume more vegetable matter than most woodpeckers. Insects that are eaten include ants, adult and larval beetles, and caterpillars. Vegetation eaten includes grain, berries, and fruits of holly, dogwood, and poison ivy. Acorns and berries are stored in crevices in the fall (Kilham 1963, Bent 1939).
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Habitat: The
golden-fronted woodpecker's preferred habitat is mesquite and riparian
woodlands in Texas and Oklahoma. Cooke (1888) listed this species as an
abundant resident of the lower Rio Grande Valley, Texas, in 1884.Nest: Nesting behavior of the golden-fronted is similar to that of the red-bellied woodpecker (Pearson 1936). Tall trees of pecan, oak, and mesquite are the major species used for nesting (Bent 1939). Occasionally fence posts, telephone poles, and bird boxes are used (Reed 1965). Food: The diet of the golden-fronted woodpecker consists of both insects and vegetable matter. Grasshoppers make up more than half of the animal matter and other insects include beetles and ants (Pearson 1936, Bent 1939). Vegetable matter consumed consists of corn, acorns, wild fruits, and berries (Bent 1939).
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Habitat: This woodpecker is found on
desert mesas in association with creosote bush, mesquite, and saguaro cactus
from central Arizona to edges of adjacent states. It is also common in river
bottoms and in foothill canyons among cottonwoods, willows, and
sycamores.Nest: The Gila woodpecker excavates holes in saguaro cacti for nests. Cottonwoods, willows, and mesquites are also used at higher elevations (Bent 1939, Ligon 1961). Food: The diet of the Gila woodpecker consists of ants, beetles, grasshoppers, fruits from saguaro cactus, and mistletoe berries (Bent 1939). This woodpecker has been reported to remove eggs from the nests of various songbirds.
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