Tiny Tufts! A Marsh Owl, plus 2 other African owls in comments!
I have been feeling neglectful of some of the more exotic owl species lately. All the GHO and Barred babies have been dominating my feeds recently, so I've been overflowing with that content.
This morning's other post about the owl with 11 step kids was too good to pass up, but I was a little disappointed the photo wasn't very high quality, so I'll share some better pics with you now!
This fluffy fellow is a Marsh Owl. It looks a bit like his cousin, the Short Eared Owl. I liked this picture because the little tufts are not usually in their upward position. Much like the Shorty, this owl nests in a grass lined divot on the ground.
Again, while (edit: the Spotted Eagle Owl is) in the same genus as one of the greatest American owls, this owl is its own species.
This is the most common owl in southern Africa, and it is the smallest of the Eagle Owls. They are commonly found near people, prefer to live in rocky areas, and have a distinct call from the American GHO.
How wild that these continents have such similar owls when so many other continents have owls that look like total aliens to me. Cause if you'd have told me that these were pics of a Burrowing Owl and a GHO, I'd 100% have believed you.
Whoops, I never said the one above is a Spotted Eagle Owl.
Here is a journey of Bubos from South Africa, through north Africa and the Middle East, to India, up through East Asia, over the Bering Land Bridge, and down to South America. I didn't include all the Bubos, but this should be pretty good showing how they changed as they spread out over most of the world. The Fish Owls also probably split off of this group in East Asia. The Snowy and GHO split off somewhere while the land bridge existed.
I'm actually surprised that they look more similar than I expected. Especially the coloring on this Pharoah individual and this Eurasian individual. But that body shape is surprisingly preserved across a lot of different geographies.
I did a little cherry picking in images, but mainly just to find ones not overly edited.
I wonder which is thought to be the oldest. Middle to east Asia is where the Eurasian Eagle Owl and the Fish Owls were the least GHO looking, while the more away from East Asia we go in either direction looks more GHO. If they branched off to be the Fish Owls that are only in Asia and the Snowies in the Arctic, that would seem to be where the most diversity came from.
I'm no zoologist though, so don't put much weight into this. 🙃
I'm glad you enjoyed it! This is a bit more direct comparison then I've done before as well.
At one point I was going to show off every owl, one by one, but since about 1/3 of all species would pass for your average Screech Owl, I passed on that project.