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Short-eared Owl.
367. Short-eared Owl. Asio flammeus.
Range.--Whole of North America, breeding
from the middle portions of the United States
northward, and wintering in the United States.
White.
This species is of the size of the last, but is
paler, has very short ear tufts, and is streaked
beneath. Its habits are the same except that it
frequently hunts, over the marshes and meadows,
on dark days and towards dusk.
Their four to seven pure white eggs are laid upon the ground in marshy
places, sometimes upon a lining of sticks and weeds, and are generally under a
bush, or close to an old log. Size of eggs 1.55 × 1.25.
White.
368. Barred Owl. Strix varia varia.
Range.--Eastern North America, from
the British Provinces, southward; west to
the Rockies.
Barred Owl.
This species is the most common of
the large owls, and can be distinguished
by its mottled and barred gray and white
plumage, and lack of ear tufts; length 20
inches. It is the bird commonly meant
by the term "hoot owl", and being strictly
nocturnal, is rarely seen flying in the day time,
unless disturbed from its roosting place in the
deep woods. Its food consists chiefly of rats,
mice and frogs, and sometimes, but not often,
poultry. It nests in the heart of large woods,
generally in hollows of large trees, and less
often in deserted Crow's nests. They lay from
two to four pure white eggs, averaging considerably
smaller than those of the Great Horned
Owl; size 1.95 × 1.65.
368a. Florida Barred Owl. Strix varia alleni.
Range.--Florida and the Gulf States; north
to South Carolina.
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