Barking owl explained

The barking owl or barking boobook (Ninox connivens), also known as the winking owl, is a nocturnal bird species native to mainland Australia and parts of New Guinea and the Moluccas. They are a medium-sized brown owl and have a characteristic voice with calls ranging from a barking dog noise to an intense human-like howl.

Etymology

The owl takes its name from its characteristic barking voice. For a short period before 2016, the Red List of Threatened Species referred to this species as the "barking boobook". However, this is not used as a common name in Australia or other English speaking areas in this species' range and has now been corrected to barking owl. The Yanyuwa name for the owl is mulurrku.[1]

Taxonomy

The barking owl was first described by the English ornithologist John Latham in 1801 with the binomial name Falco connivens.[2] Latham commented that the species "Inhabits New Holland, but no history annexed, further than that it has a wonderful faculty of contracting and dilating the iris: and that the native name is Goora-a-Gang."[3] The specific epithet is the Latin connivens 'winking'. [4]

There are five subspecies:[5]

N. b. remigialis was formerly considered a subspecies of the Australian boobook (N. boobook) but was transferred to N. connivens by the International Ornithological Congress in 2022.[8]

Description

The barking owl is coloured brown with white spots on its wings and a vertically streaked chest. They have large eyes that have a yellow iris, a discrete facial mask and yellow skin on the feet. Their underparts are brownish-grey and coarsely spotted white with their tail and flight feathers being strongly banded brown and white. They are a robust, medium-sized owl long and their wingspan is between .[9] They weigh between [10] [p20]. Size varies only slightly between the male and female birds with the male barking owl being 8-10 % heavier. They are one of only a handful of owl species exhibiting normal sexual dimorphism. In a banding study conducted in the Pilliga forests of northern New South Wales, males averaged with females averaging [10] [p20]. In Australia, the smallest barking owls are found on Cape York Peninsula and the largest in southern Australia.

Distribution and Habitat

The barking owl lives in mainland Australia along the eastern and northern coast of the continent and the southwest areas surrounding Perth, Western Australia. Inland they occupy areas near lakes and waterways or other wooded environments. They also live in drier parts of New Guinea and the Moluccas (Halmahera, Morotai, Bacan and Obi). Once widespread, barking owls are now less common in southern mainland Australia.

They choose to live in forests or woodland areas that have large trees for nesting and foliage cover for roosting. They often reside near river, swamp or creek beds as these features often have large trees with hollows required for nesting and the productivity to support sufficient prey.The only detailed studies of barking owl home-ranges have been conducted in southern Australia where the species is declining. In northern Victoria, barking owl pairs were found to average a home-range of with little overlap between pairs. Foraging was concentrated within forested areas of each home range.[11] These results are mirrored in the Pilliga forests of northern NSW although there the home ranges were larger, often up to .[12]

Although barking owls are uncommon and sometimes even rare in many suburban areas, they occasionally do get accustomed to humans and even start to nest in streets or near farm-houses.

Behaviour

Diet

The barking owl has one of the broadest diets of any Australian owl. Barking owls hunt in timbered and open habitats but usually rely on trees as hunting perches. Their diet includes prey taken from the ground, the trees, the surface of waterbodies, and directly from the air. In some locations mammals make up the majority of prey biomass with prey sizes from mice and small carnivorous marsupials up to rabbits and brushtail possums around a kilogram or more in weight. Sugar gliders are a frequent prey item. Bats of all sizes are also commonly taken.

In some areas, bird prey items make a sizeable contribution to the diet. Birds up to the size of sulphur-crested cockatoos (~800 grams) and ducks are taken, but many smaller birds are more commonly taken. One frequent prey item is the tawny frogmouth, a nocturnal bird of Australian forests and woodlands. Insect prey items can dominate the prey item count. Beetles and moths are commonly taken on the wing. A range of other insects are also consumed. Occasionally frogs, reptiles, fish or crustaceans are eaten. In summary, if an animal can be detected by a barking owl and it is of its size or smaller, it can be considered as potential prey.[10] [pp8–11, 35-77]

Breeding

The breeding season of the barking owl is from July to September in the north of Australia and from August to October in the south.[13] The nest is formed of decayed debris, usually in the large hollow of an old eucalypt near a river.[14] A clutch of 2 or 3 roundish, dull-white eggs, each measuring, is laid and incubated by the female for about 36 days. The young at first are covered in white down and fledge by 5 to 6 weeks.

Voice

Most people hear the barking owl rather than see it as it has a loud and explosive voice. The main territorial vocalisation is in the form of a double 'hoot', similar in pattern to the other Australian hawk owls. It sounds like a double dog bark, so closely resembling a small dog that it is difficult to tell the difference. The barking owl name is derived from these calls. Males 'bark' at a lower pitch than females, particularly when a pair perform the barking calls together. Barking calls can be varied in pitch and intensity depending on the purpose of the call. Loud barks are given as territorial calls and can be used in confrontations between pairs in adjacent territories. Lower pitched softer barks are often used around the nest or roost areas by the male to call the female for a meal.

Barking owls also have a range of other vocalisations. These might be described as growls, howls or screams and bleating and twittering. Growls and howls are part of a continuum of calls relating to threats, particularly during nesting. The level of the threat, typically determines the level of the call, with the lowest level being a low pitched and soft growl. This is usually a warning note to the nesting partner. This climbs into a louder and higher pitched series of howls, often made while the owl dives at the intruder. At its most extreme, this might be described as a scream. The screaming of the barking owl is said to sound like a woman or child screaming in pain. Hearings of 'screaming lady,' as it is so nicknamed, are rare and many only hear the sound once in their life even if they live next to a barking owl nest. While screams are usually related to nest defence, some barking owls will make this call in non-nest related situations. Myths surround the events that caused the owl to originally "mimic" the sounds.

Juvenile barking owls have a twittering, insect-like call when begging for food. It is similar to that of other juvenile hawk owls.[15] Female barking owls will often make a gentle bleating sound when receiving food from the male owl. An excited variation of this sound is made during copulation.

Conservation status

Barking owls are not listed as threatened on the Australian Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999. However, their conservation status varies from state to state within Australia. For example:

Decline and extent

In the State of Victoria, according to Action Statement 116 issued under the FFG Act: "The Barking Owl is the most threatened owl in Victoria. The population has been estimated to be fewer than 50 breeding pairs (Silveira et al. 1997), though work in north-eastern Victoria (Taylor et al. 1999;) suggests that this estimate may have been conservative in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Existing records of Barking Owls on the Atlas of Victorian Wildlife database (NRE 2001) are unlikely to give an accurate representation of the current distribution and abundance of the species. Many of these records are dated, occurring in areas where once-suitable habitat has been lost or degraded. Extensive surveys in Victorian forests have shown the species to be rare, localised and mainly found in north-eastern Victoria (Loyn et al. 2001)."

A similar pattern of decline is evident in NSW with surveys in 1998, 2004 and 2008 showing barking owls to be rare in areas that had been assumed to be strongholds.[21] [22] [23] Larger population areas have been demonstrated to be isolated from one another.[24]

In south-western Australia a survey (in the late 1990s) of 100 forest sites found no barking owls.[25]

In contrast (as of 2012), barking owl calls are still a common sound in many wooded parts of Queensland and the Northern Territory, although there have been few recent published population studies/surveys in those areas.

Threatening processes

According to the Action Statement No. 116 made under the state of Victoria, the primary threat to the barking owl is loss of habitat, particularly the deterioration or loss of the large, hollow-bearing trees on which the species depends for nesting. Hollows suitable for nesting for owls do not form in eucalypts until they are at least 150–200 years old.[26] Similarly, hollows are an important resource for many prey species of the barking owl, e.g. gliders and possums. Such trees are not being regrown rapidly enough to exceed expected losses in the next century. The removal of dead, standing trees and stags for firewood is also likely to remove nesting sites for the species. Native prey species such as arboreal mammals and hollow-nesting birds have declined in some areas through clearing of native vegetation, loss of hollows and the impact of introduced predators. These declines may also have contributed to the decline of the barking owl, although in some areas European rabbits have become a substitute prey, and local populations of the barking owl have become heavily dependent upon them. It is not known how the owls will fare through periods of rabbit decline due to climate fluctuations, control programs or disease such as calicivirus. Where poisons are used to control rabbits, secondary poisoning of owls may be an issue.

Mythology

In the early settlement of Australia a screaming noise matching the barking owl's description was credited and told to the settlers by the Indigenous Australians or the Aboriginals as the bunyip. The bunyip was said to be a fearsome creature that inhabited swamps, rivers and billabongs. Bunyips had many different descriptions but most were of an animal of some sort whose favorite food was human women. The cries and noises coming from swamps and creeks at night were not said to be the victims but actually the noise the bunyip made. It is believed by many that the sound is of the nocturnal barking owl and that proves the location, the noises and the rarity of the bunyip cries. It is still not proven though that the barking owl actually started the bunyip story and it could be due to other sources. But it seems that the barking owl will stay as the most likely explanation. Myths surround the events that caused the owl to originally "mimic" the screaming sounds.[27]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bradley . John . Yanyuwa Wuka: language from Yanyuwa Country - a Yanyuwa dictionary and cultural resource . 1992 .
  2. Book: Latham, John . John Latham (ornithologist) . 1801 . Supplementum indicis ornithologici sive systematis ornithologiae . London . Leigh & Sotheby . la . xii .
  3. Book: Latham, John . 1801 . Supplement II to the General synopsis of birds . London . Leigh & Sotheby . 53 .
  4. Web site: Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird-names. Jobling . James A. . 2010 . 2020-05-31.
  5. Web site: Owls – IOC World Bird List . 2022-05-09 . en-US.
  6. Stresemann . Erwin . 1930 . Ninox novaeseelandiae remigialis . live . Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club . 50 . 61–62 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170922195149/http://www2.nrm.se/ve/birds/sape/GlobalOwlProject/Ninox/Ninox%20boobook%20remigialis%20(Stresemann)%201930,%20Bulletin%20of%20the%20British%20Ornithologists%27%20Club,%2050,%20pag.pdf . 2017-09-22 . 2017-09-22.
  7. Johnstone . R. E. . van Balen . S. . 2013 . The birds of the Kai and Tayandu islands, Maluku region, Indonesia . live . Western Australian Naturalists Club . 29 . 1 . 11–56 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211221152712/https://www.researchgate.net/publication/256400368_THE_BIRDS_OF_THE_KAI_AND_TAYANDU_ISLANDS_MALUKU_REGION_INDONESIA . 2021-12-21 . 2019-01-27.
  8. IOC World Bird List 12.1 . IOC World Bird List Datasets . en-US . 10.14344/ioc.ml.12.1. 246050277 . free .
  9. Higgins, P.J.,ed. (1999). Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds. Volume 4: Parrots to Dollarbird. Oxford University Press, Melbourne.
  10. Stanton, M. A. (2011) Barking owl diet in the Pilliga Forests of northern New South Wales. Master of Science Thesis, University of New England https://rune.une.edu.au/web/handle/1959.11/8652
  11. Schedvin (2007) Distributional ecology of the barking owl in Victoria, Australia. PhD thesis, Charles Sturt University
  12. Kavanagh, R., & Stanton, M. A. (2009) "Conserving barking owls in the Pilliga Forests." Wingspan 19(2): 28-30. ISSN 1036-7810
  13. Morcombe, Michael (2012) Field Guide to Australian Birds. Pascal Press, Glebe, NSW. Revised edition.
  14. Pizzey, Graham and Doyle, Roy. (1980) A Field Guide to the Birds of Australia. Collins Publishers, Sydney.
  15. Hollands (2008), Owls, Frogmouths and Nightjars of Australia, Bloomings Books,
  16. Department of Sustainability and Environment, Victoria (2005) Web site: Listed Items . October 16, 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20050718182613/http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/DSE/nrenpa.nsf/LinkView/EADA0F1874AF9CF24A2567C1001020A388BBA5581CF9D859CA256BB300271BDB . July 18, 2005 . dead .
  17. Department of Sustainability and Environment, Victoria (2006) Web site: Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act: Action Statement Index by Category and Scientific Name . October 16, 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060911130015/http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/DSE/nrenpa.nsf/LinkView/617768308BCB666E4A25684E00192281E7A24BB36FF60A144A256DEA00244294 . September 11, 2006 . dead .
  18. Book: Victorian Department of Sustainability and Environment . Advisory List of Threatened Vertebrate Fauna in Victoria - 2007 . Department of Sustainability and Environment . 2007 . East Melbourne, Victoria . 978-1-74208-039-0 . 15 .
  19. NSW Scientific Committee (1998) "Final Determination of Barking Owl." https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/Topics/Animals-and-plants/Threatened-species/NSW-Threatened-Species-Scientific-Committee/Determinations/Final-determinations/1996-1999/Barking-Owl-Ninox-connivens-vulnerable-species-listing
  20. Garnett S., Szabo J., and Dutson G. (2010) The Action Plan for Australian Birds 2010, CSIRO Publishing/Birds Australia. http://www.publish.csiro.au/pid/6781.htm
  21. Debus . S.J.S. . 2001 . Surveys of the barking owl and masked owl on the north-west slopes of New South Wales . Corella . 25 . 1 . 5–11 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160314090115/http://www.absa.asn.au/absainc/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/C251005.pdf . 2016-03-14 .
  22. Parker . D.G. . Webster . R. . Belcher . C.A. . Leslie . D.J. . 2007 . A survey of large forest owls in State Forests of south-western New South Wales . Australian Zoologist . 34 . 1 . 78–84 . 10.7882/AZ.2007.004 .
  23. McGregor . H. . 2011 . Large forest owls in the river red gum State Forests of south-western New South Wales – an account of their 2008 status . Australian Zoologist . 35 . 3 . 864–869 . 10.7882/AZ.2011.039 .
  24. Soderquist . T. . 2009 . How extensive is southern Australia's largest barking owl population? . Wingspan . 19 . 2 . 31–33 . 1036-7810.
  25. Liddelow, G.L., Wheeler, I.B., and Kavanagh, R.P. (2002) "Owls in the southwest forests of Western Australia." In Ecology and Conservation of Owls. (Eds. I. Newton, R. Kavanagh, J. Olsen and I. R. Taylor) pp. 233-241. (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood, Vic.)
  26. Parnaby . Harry E. . Hollow arguments . Nature Australia . 25 . 1 . 80 . Australian Museum . 1995 . 1324-2598.
  27. Web site: Bunyip:Explanations. 2020-05-31.