Times Colonist

Urban owls struggle to adapt

- TERRI THEODORE

VANCOUVER — One of Canada’s largest population­s of barn owls might be more aptly named bridge or overpass owls because they’re losing normal roosting spaces and struggling to adapt to urbanizati­on, a new study says.

It was based on owls around Metro Vancouver and found that habitat loss, road deaths and rodent poison have a lethal impact on the birds, but changes to green-space policies and public education could mitigate the loss.

Wildlife biologist and lead researcher Sofi Hindmarch said the original focus of the study was on the impact of rodenticid­e, but that changed when the owls were seen to be dependent on hunting along grass growing next to highways.

Barn owls’ hunting behaviour usually involves flying within a metre of the ground, making them especially vulnerable to being hit by vehicles, said the study contracted by Environmen­t Canada and published in the journal Landscape and Urban Planning.

Most of Canada’s barn owl population is found in the Lower Mainland and the Fraser Valley, said the study about the bird that is distinguis­hed by its tancoloure­d, heart-shaped facial disk.

The research was conducted between 2010 and 2014, when 11 adult barn owls were radio tagged and followed for five to 12 months, until the transmitte­r fell off or the battery died. It didn’t take long for researcher­s to learn that the owls faced certain dangers in urban settings.

“One female was reported dead two weeks after being radiotagge­d, likely the victim of a vehicle collision,” the report said. Road mortality is recognized as one of the main threats to the owl population in Europe and North America.

Hindmarch tracked the birds at night and said she was surprised by their urban wanderings.

She followed one pair to an industrial building, other birds to overpasses and another pair to a busy commuter bridge over the Fraser River. “A lot of these areas were predominan­tly grass, marsh and farmland not that long ago.

“I suspect these are kind of remnant individual population­s that are still persisting in an environmen­t that is becoming increasing­ly urban.”

In the Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley, where blueberrie­s and greenhouse-grown vegetables are the region’s fastest-growing crops, the birds’ grassland habitats are disappeari­ng.

High-density human developmen­ts and farming also draw rats and mice, which the study said prompt the need for rodent control.

Hindmarch said researcher­s began the field study to determine if the owls were being exposed to poison as stricter regulation­s were being implemente­d.

Barn owls were more likely to eat prey exposed to poison if they were hunting in grass growing along the roadside, while that possibilit­y decreased for owls with a home range of hayfields or other grass habitat, the study said.

“Threats from the loss of habitat and nest sites were the main reasons barn owls were recommende­d to be upgraded in 2014 to ‘threatened’ in Western Canada,” it said.

The Canadian Species at Risk Act lists the Western barn owl population as a special concern, while the Eastern population found in southern Ontario is listed as endangered.

But Hindmarch said the owls she studied were highly adaptive and could co-exist with humans.

“We just have to be willing to share a little bit of our real expensive land mass with them.”

Some cities are creating wildlife corridors, considerin­g alternativ­e nesting sites and leaving grass areas in their parks wild to accommodat­e wildlife habitat, she said.

“That doesn’t only benefit the barn owls. Our bees are in decline. There are so many other species that would benefit in making sure we have wild flowers and grass, not just golf-course grass in our parks.”

 ??  ?? Barn owls face many threats in the city, including habitat loss, road dangers and rodent poison, a study says.
Barn owls face many threats in the city, including habitat loss, road dangers and rodent poison, a study says.

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