Otago Daily Times

Photo of rarely seen little owl delights

- JOHN GIBB john.gibb@odt.co.nz

AFTER many years of looking but not seeing much, Dunedin zoologist Anthony Harris was delighted to see a photograph of a little owl.

‘‘It’s a great photograph of a littleseen species,’’ Mr Harris said yesterday.

Otago Daily Times illustrati­ons editor Stephen Jaquiery photograph­ed the bird as it was perching on the windowsill of an old building near Tunnel Beach Rd, in Dunedin, yesterday afternoon.

Mr Harris, who is also an Otago Museum honorary entomologi­st, said he had been keeping an eye out for little owls (Athene noctua) for about 40 years.

He had found several nests in abandoned barns on the Taieri over the years, and within the nests had seen the bones of small rodents and birds and the remains of insects, but he had glimpsed little of the little owl itself.

The little owl was introduced in Otago and Canterbury, from Germany, between 1906 and 1910 in an effort to control the numbers of exotic small birds feeding on orchards and crops.

Mr Harris said the photograph showed the ‘‘characteri­stic habitat’’ of a bird which often nested in abandoned rural buildings and was rarely seen, despite often hunting small birds during the day, and digging up earthworms in bright sunlight, as well as feeding in the evening.

His only sighting of a live little owl had come 32 years ago, ‘‘which suggests they are little seen’’, he said.

 ?? PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY ?? Now you see me . . . This little owl blends into the sunlit, weathered boards of a derelict building near Tunnel Beach Rd, in Dunedin, yesterday.
PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Now you see me . . . This little owl blends into the sunlit, weathered boards of a derelict building near Tunnel Beach Rd, in Dunedin, yesterday.

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