Logan

Long-Eared Owl Ambassador

Logan
Sex:

Male

Arrival:

2020 / Adult

Injury / Condition:

Left wing fracture

About Logan

When Logan arrived at Liberty Wildlife, he was found to have a fracture to his left wing. The location of the injury precluded surgery as an option. His limited ability to fly classified him as non-releasable, becoming a valued member of Liberty’s education team.

Description

The long eared owl is distributed throughout the northern hemisphere. In North America, they breed as far north as the Northwest Territories through southern Canada and across the United States as far south as northern Baja California, southern Arizona, and New Mexico, east to Pennsylvania, New York, and northern New England.

Life Span

Captive long eared owls have been known to live over 10 years.

Prey / Food

They feed primarily on mammals which include voles, deer mice, pocket mice, and kangaroo rats but can also include squirrels, bats, and cottontail rabbits. Bird prey includes meadowlarks, blackbirds, juncos, horned larks, doves, bluebirds, and thrashers. Long eared owls sometimes eat insects, frogs, and snakes.

Babies / Nests

Long eared owls apparently do no nest-building themselves. Instead, they usually appropriate stick nests built in trees by other bird species. Less often, they raise their young in cavities in trees or cliffs, in abandoned squirrel nests, or on the ground. In Arizona, these owls sometimes nest in crooks of saguaro cactus. The female lays between 2 and 10 eggs in a clutch. Incubation is usually 26- 28 days. Fledglings begin making short flights at about 35 days old and become independent at 10 to 11 weeks old.

© 2024 Liberty Wildlife - Privacy Policy