Lodi News-Sentinel

Snowy owl numbers far lower than once thought

- By Tammy Webber

CHICAGO — Scott Judd trained his camera lens on the white dot in the distance. As he moved up the Lake Michigan shoreline, the speck on a breakwater came into view and took his breath away: it was a snowy owl, thousands of miles from its Arctic home.

“It was an amazing sight,” said Judd, a Chicago IT consultant. “It’s almost like they’re from another world. They captivate people in a way that other birds don’t.”

The large white raptors have descended on the Great Lakes region and northeaste­rn U.S. in huge numbers in recent weeks, hanging out at airports, in farm fields, on light poles and along beaches, to the delight of bird lovers.

But for researcher­s, this winter’s mass migration of the owls from their breeding grounds above the Arctic Circle is serious business.

It’s a chance to trap and fit some of the visitors with tiny transmitte­rs to help track them around the globe and study a long-misunderst­ood species whose numbers likely are far fewer than previously thought, researcher­s say.

“There is still a lot that we don’t know about them ... but we aim to answer the questions in the next few years,” said Canadian biologist Jean-Francois Therrien, a senior researcher at Hawk Mountain Sanctuary in Pennsylvan­ia.

The solar-powered transmitte­rs can last for years, collecting informatio­n such as latitude, longitude, flight speed and air temperatur­e that is downloaded to a server when the birds fly into range of a cell tower.

The use of transmitte­rs, which intensifie­d during the last North American mass migration in winter 2013-14, already has yielded big surprises.

Instead of 300,000 snowy owls worldwide, as long believed, researcher­s say the population likely is closer to 30,000 or fewer. The previous estimate was based on how many might be able to breed in a given area.

That calculatio­n was made assuming snowy owls acted like other birds, favoring fixed nesting and wintering sites. But researcher­s discovered the owls are nomads, often nesting or wintering thousands of miles from previous locations.

The miscalcula­tion doesn’t necessaril­y mean snowy owls, which can grow to about 2 feet long with 5-foot wingspans, are in decline. Scientists simply don’t know because they never had an accurate starting point.

This month, snowy owls were listed as vulnerable — one step away from endangered — by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. They’re protected in the U.S. under the Migratory Bird Act.

This year’s mass migration is a bit of good news. Researcher­s once thought these so-called “irruptions” signaled a lack of prey in the Arctic, but now believe the opposite: Breeding owls feed on lemmings, a rodent that lives under Arctic snowpack and whose population surges about every three or four years. More lemmings means the owl population explodes- and that more birds than usual will winter in places people can see them.

 ?? PAUL A. SMITH/ MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? A snowy owl sits on a sidewalk while hunting near the Lake Michigan shore in Milwaukee, Wisc., on Dec. 10, 2012.
PAUL A. SMITH/ MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL FILE PHOTOGRAPH A snowy owl sits on a sidewalk while hunting near the Lake Michigan shore in Milwaukee, Wisc., on Dec. 10, 2012.

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