Barn Owl Tyto alba Lechuza de Campanario,
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Photo: D. Fuller
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A whitish owl with a heart-shaped face. Length: 32-40 cm.; weight: males 470 g., females 570 g. Audio (M. Oberle). This night bird has a worldwide distribution, including North America, Cuba, Jamaica, and Hispaniola. Accidental on Puerto Rico in open forests and towns.
TAXONOMY: STRIGIFORMES; TYTONIDAE. Also called Common Barn-Owl. |
Photo: D. Fuller
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Photo: J. Volpi*
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References Arredondo Ant·nez, C. and V. N. Chirino Flores. 2002. Consideraciones sobre la alimentaci≤n de Tyto alba furcata (Aves: Strigiformes) con implicaciones ecol≤gicas en Cuba. El Pitirre 15(1):16-24. Bent, A.C. 1938. Life histories of North American birds of prey, part 2. Smithsonian Instit. U.S. National Museum Bull. 170. (Reprinted by Dover Press, NY, 1961). del Hoyo, J., A. Elliott, and J. Sargatal, eds. 1999. Handbook of the Birds of the World, Vol. 5. Barn Owls to Hummingbirds. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. Ehrlich, P.R., D.S. Dobkin, and D. Wheye. 1988. The birderÆs handbook: a field guide to the natural history of North American birds. Simon and Schuster/ Fireside, NY. Marti, C. D. 1992. Barn Owl (Tyto alba). No. 1 in The birds of North America (F. Gill, A. Poole, and P. Stettenheim, eds.). Acad. Nat. Sci., Philadelphia, PA, and Am. Ornithol. Union, Washington, D.C. Pe±a, J. L. and M. Konishi. 2001. Auditory spatial receptive fields created by multiplication. Science 292:249-252. Raffaele, H.A. 1989. A guide to the birds of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Princeton. Raffaele, H.A. 1989. Una guía a las aves de Puerto Rico y las Islas Vírgenes. Publishing Resources, Inc., Santurce, PR. Raffaele, H.A., J.W. Wiley, O.H. Garrido, A.R. Keith, and J.I. Raffaele. 1998. Guide to the birds of the West Indies. Princeton. Roulin, A., C. Dijkstra, C. Riols and A.-L. Ducrest. 2001. Female- and male-specific signals of quality in the barn owl. J Evolutionary Biol 14(2):255. Next related species in taxonomic order Previous related species in taxonomic order |