Page 10 - ATA
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                                                                                                           LOCAL Tuesday 3 sepTember 2019































































             Habitat destruction: The Aruban Borrowing Owl                                                                  Episode XXXIII




            Continued from Page 14

            Standing about 7-10 inches tall, this lit-
            tle owl gets its name from where it lives.
            Burrowing owls are often found in aban-
            doned rodent burrows, old tubes, most
            often the dig a nest in sand mounds. Far
            from trees, they nest and live near their
            burrows.  Their  brown-mottled  feathers
            help them blend in to the surrounding
            landscape where they dine on insects,
            small mammals, and sometimes reptiles
            and amphibians.
            Burrowing owls can be difficult to spot
            if  they  are  not  moving.  In  addition  to
            their  ability  to  naturally  camouflage
            with their environment, an owl appears
            from a distance to be just another prai-
            rie dog standing sentry near its under-
            ground home. An observer must care-
            fully scan a prairie dog colony with bin-
            oculars, looking carefully for any move-
            ments from the owls. The reward may
            be  seeing  the  little  dancing  hops  the
            owls sometimes do as they bob around
            on their long legs.
            Burrowing owls catch food as they walk
            or  run  along  the  ground,  and  some-
            times  snatch  insects  in  midair  as  they
            fly just above the surface. Much of their
            food sources are available during the                     Native artistic interpretations of a Shoco and a Cascabel Owl and Rattlesnake
            day, but they are also active at night.q
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