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Verreaux's eagle-owl

Verreaux's eagle-owl (Ketupa lactea), also commonly known as the milky eagle owl or giant eagle owl,[3] is a member of the family Strigidae. This species is widespread in sub-Saharan Africa. A member of the genus Ketupa, it is the largest African owl, measuring up to 66 cm (26 in) in total length. This eagle-owl is a resident primarily of dry, wooded savanna. Verreaux's eagle-owl is mainly grey in color and is distinguishable from other large owls by its bright pink eyelids, a feature shared with no other owl species in the world.[4]

Verreaux's eagle-owl
From Etosha National Park
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Strigiformes
Family: Strigidae
Genus: Ketupa
Species:
K. lactea
Binomial name
Ketupa lactea
(Temminck, 1820)

Verreaux's eagle-owl is a highly opportunistic predator equipped with powerful talons. Just over half of its known diet is composed of mammals but equal or even greater numbers of birds and even insects may be hunted locally, along with any other appropriately sized prey that is encountered.[5][6] This species is considered of Least Concern by IUCN as it occurs over a wide range and has shown some adaptability to human-based alterations and destruction of habitat and adaptability to diverse prey when a primary prey species declines in a region. As a large, highly territorial species of owl, it does, however, occur at fairly low densities and some regional declines have been reported.[1][4]

The common name commemorates the French naturalist Jules Verreaux. The type specimen that was later described by Temminck at the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie was collected by Verreaux while he was still in his teens.[7][8]

Taxonomy edit

 
A Verreaux's eagle-owl during a rainstorm

There are no known subspecies in the Verreaux's eagle-owl, and there is remarkably little variation in their appearance across their considerable distribution.[5] Reportedly, birds in the southern part of their range appear marginally larger on average but these size differences are quite subtle and may be considered as a mild case of Bergmann's rule.[9] While genetic research has been undertaken for this species, its closest living relative in the genus Ketupa is not fully clear. At one time, the Verreaux's eagle-owl was mentioned as an owl with particularly mysterious genetic alliances among living owls.[10] Per Konig & Weick (2008), the species with studied genetic markers found to be most closely related are a dark-eyed species pair of Asian eagle-owls, the spot-bellied (Ketupa nipalensis) and barred eagle-owls (Ketupa sumatrana), but these are not particularly closely related to the Verreaux's.[4]

Among species with available genomes to study for DNA characteristics, it has been revealed that the fish owls, in particular the brown fish owl (Ketupa zeylonensis), is the third most closely related species to the Verreaux's.[11] Notably, Konig & Weick did not test the DNA of other African eagle-owls that may bear relation to the Verreaux's eagle-owl based largely on their solid dark brown eyes, namely Fraser's (Ketupa poensis), greyish (Bubo cinerascens) and Shelley's eagle-owl, as opposed to other eagle-owls which have yellow to orange irises. Fraser's and Usambara eagle-owls also have a small amount of bare skin around their eyes but this tends to bluish in color and is not nearly as extensive as the pink seen in Verreaux's.[4] Other large owls native to Africa, the fishing owls, also have uniform dark brownish eyes and are sometimes included with the genus Bubo but how closely related they are to modern eagle-owls is unclear.[4][12] Pliocene fossil Bubo owls with clear similarities based on osteological characteristics to the modern Verreaux's eagle-owl (most are currently classified as Ketupa cf. lactea) from South Africa and Tanzania, indicate that the Verreaux's eagle-owl descended from slightly smaller ancestors that increased in size as they diversified from related species.[13][14]

Description edit

 
At San Diego Zoo

Despite the alternative common name of giant eagle-owl, Verreaux's eagle-owl is not the largest owl or eagle-owl in the world. It is, however, a very large and powerful owl species. This species is both the largest owl found in Africa and the world's largest owl to occur in the tropics. Among all the world's owls, it is fourth heaviest living owl, after Blakiston's fish owl (Ketupa blakistoni), the Eurasian eagle-owl (Bubo bubo) and the tawny fish owl (Ketupa flavipes). In addition, it is the fourth longest extant owl (measured from the bill to the tip of the tail), after the great gray (Strix nebulosa), Blakiston's fish and Eurasian eagle-owls.[4][15][16][17] Based on body mass and wing chord length, Verreaux's eagle-owl is about the same size as "medium-sized" races of Eurasian eagle-owl, such as those from Central Asian steppe (B. b. turcomanus) and the Himalayas (B. b. hemachalana), slightly smaller than most northern Eurasian races, considerably smaller than Siberian and Russian eagle-owls, and somewhat larger than the smallest Eurasian eagle-owl subspecies, such as those from the Iberian Peninsula (B. b. hispanus) and the Middle East (B. b. omissus or nikolskii).[18][19][20][21][22]

 
The Verreaux's eagle-owl's ear tufts can appear nearly absent.

Verreaux's eagle-owl ranges from 58 to 66 cm (23 to 26 in) in total length.[3][23] This species has been reported as having an average wingspan of 140 cm (4 ft 7 in), but Mikkola referenced this as the wingspan of a smaller male.[3][24][12] The largest known wingspan from a wild female measured nearly 164 cm (5 ft 5 in).[25] While female owls are almost always larger than males, Verreaux's eagle-owl stands out as one of the most sexually dimorphic living owl species, some studies showing the female can average 35% heavier than the male. In comparison, the females of the nominate subspecies of Eurasian eagle-owls and great horned owl (Bubo virginianus) are reported to average approximately 20% and 25% heavier than the males, respectively.[15][26] The full range of reported body mass in the species ranges from 1,615 to 2,000 g (3.6 to 4.4 lb) in males against a body mass of 2,475–3,150 g (5.5–6.9 lb) in females.[4][27][28] In one study, 4 males were found to have averaged 1,704 g (3.8 lb) while 6 females averaged 2,625 g (5.8 lb).[4][15] Another study found 5 males to have averaged approximately 1,700 g (3.7 lb) while five females averaged 2,300 g (5.1 lb).[3][29] Unusually large sizes have been claimed in captivity with claims that specimens measuring up to 75 cm (30 in) in length and 200 cm (6 ft 7 in) in wingspan but these are unverified and possibly misreported as these figures match the largest Eurasian eagle-owls.[22] Males heavier than any in the wild have been verified in captivity to weigh up to 2,200 g (4.9 lb).[27] Among standard measurements, the female is reported to measure from 447 to 490 mm (17.6 to 19.3 in), averaging 465 mm (18.3 in), in wing chord, 230 to 273 mm (9.1 to 10.7 in) in the tail, while the same measurements in the male are from 420 to 490 mm (17 to 19 in), averaging 448 mm (17.6 in), and from 220 to 275 mm (8.7 to 10.8 in) in tail length. In both sexes, the tarsus has measured 73 to 86 mm (2.9 to 3.4 in) and the bill (in a small sample) 51 to 54 mm (2.0 to 2.1 in).[4][27] Based on wing chord size compared to body mass and other linear dimensions, the Verreaux's eagle-owl averages somewhat larger in the size of its wings relative to its body size than most other eagle-owls, excluding the Asian fish owls which are also relatively long-winged.[4][27]

 
The pink eyelids of a Verreaux's eagle-owl are quite conspicuous when it is resting.

Overall, Verreaux's eagle-owl is a fairly uniform and somewhat pale gray, with light and fine brownish vermiculations on the underside. The back is more solidly light brown with white spots on the shoulder. The oval facial disc is paler, sometimes ranging into a whitish color, than the rest of the front side of the bird with strong black borders bracketing either side. One other feature that immediately distinguishes adult Verreaux's eagle-owls in good light are its pink eyelids. The ecological purpose of their colorful eyelids is not known; however, Brown (1965) opined that they replace the colorful yellow to orange eyes of eagle-owls in breeding and territorial displays, since they were very conspicuous in displaying males.[4][5][30] Their eyes are dark-brown in color and like all eagle-owls, they have ear-tufts. The ear-tufts are blunter and smaller relative to those of other African eagle-owls. The ear-tufts of this species are relatively subtle and can be missed in the field, especially if they are held lax.[8] In appearance, they are quite easily distinguished if seen well. They are much bigger and bulkier than most other co-occurring owls. The only eagle-owl species in range that approaches its size is the Shelley's eagle-owl (Ketupa shelleyi), which may (but is not confirmed to) co-exist with the Verreaux's in northern Cameroon and the southern sliver of the Central African Republic most likely in forest edge and mosaics, but that species is a much darker sooty colour overall with broad black bands on the underside. Shelley's eagle-owl also has considerably different habitat preferences, preferring deep, primary forests, and is much more rarely observed in the wild.[4][8]

The next largest owl in sub-Saharan Africa is the Cape eagle-owl (Bubo capensis). The individual home ranges, if not habitats, of the Verreaux's and cape eagle-owls may abut in nearly every part of the latter's distribution. Even in its largest race (Mackinder's eagle-owl, B. c. mackinderi) the cape eagle-owl is around 30% lighter in body mass on average than the Verreaux's eagle-owl, not to mention it being markedly different in almost all outward characteristics.[4][27] Pel's fishing owl (Scotopelia peli), which occurs in west, central and inland southern Africa and may co-exist with the Verreaux's eagle-owl in much of its range (despite favoring wetland and riparian zones surrounded by wooded areas), can attain similar sizes as the Verreaux's eagle-owl but is dramatically different in color (a rather brighter rufous-cinnamon hue) and lacks ear-tufts.[12] In combination, the characteristics of their pink eyelids, dark eyes, relatively uniform plumage and extremely large size render the Verreaux's eagle-owl as nearly unmistakable.[4][12][31]

Voice edit

The call of the Verreaux's eagle-owl is the deepest of any extant owl species and one of the deepest bird calls in the world, averaging slightly deeper than the calls of the Blakiston's and brown fish owls (Ketupu zeylonensis). The calls of Eurasian eagle-owls are less deep but are possibly louder and farther carrying.[12][32] The male's song is an exceptionally deep gwok, gwok, gwonk-gwokwokwok gwokwokwok gwonk. The depth and quality of the song makes confusion by sound more likely with a leopard (Panthera pardus) than any other bird.[5] The song is sometimes considered unmistakable.[8] According to a study in Kenya, the voice is considered the second deepest bird call after the southern ground hornbill (Bucorvus leadbeateri), though that species has a fairly croaking call reminiscent of a large frog and in recordings appears to have a less sonorous call.[5] Apparently, the song can carry up to 5 km (3.1 mi) away on quiet nights.[4] The female's call is similar but higher pitched, as in all owls to some extent because the larger female tends to have a smaller syrinx.[8][33] Like most Bubo owls, breeding pairs not infrequently call together but they are not as well-synchronized as the pair duets of spotted eagle-owls (Bubo africanus), which are often found in nearby ranges.[5][8] The alarm calls of both sexes are often a sonorous whok or hook but variable grunting notes and raspy screams also seem to indicate alarm.[4][8] Both the female and the young engage in high, piercing calls when begging for food at the nest (at which time the male does the food capture).[4][34] One other vocalization recorded has included a raspy, drawn-out shrooooo-ooo-eh apparently uttered as a distraction display mainly by the male near the nest.[5] While sound is important to some degree for inner-species relations and hunting behaviour to all owl species, the Verreaux's eagle-owl appears to have relatively small and uncomplicated ear openings compared to several smaller types of owl. This indicates that the auditory senses are relatively unimportant in this species compared to vision.[35]

Distribution and habitat edit

Verreaux's eagle-owl is found through most of sub-Saharan Africa, though it is absent from most of the deep rainforests. The species is found at the highest densities in eastern and southern Africa. As this species avoids primary forests, it is found very spottily in west Africa. Their western distribution includes The Gambia, Senegal, Guinea and Sierra Leone.[1][31] Eastward from those countries to the Central African Republic, the species is distributed in a narrow transitional zone between the Sahara and rainforests.[1] Seemingly isolated populations occur in central Nigeria and central Mali.[36][37] In south-western Africa, they range up to as far north as the southern parts of the Republic of the Congo and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, through most of Namibia (excluding the coastal regions) and northern South Africa.[1][11] In east Africa, their distribution is more or less continuous from southern Sudan, Eritrea and inland Somalia down to South Africa as far as the region of the city of Durban.[1][38][39][40]

This species inhabits mainly savanna with scattered trees and thorny vegetation. Verreaux's eagle-owls mainly inhabit rather dry regions, some bordering semi-arid areas.[4][37] In central Mali, for example, near the extreme northwestern limit of the species range, the habitat that hosts these owls averages less than 55 cm (22 in) of rainfall annually.[37] They also range into riverine forest adjacent to savanna and small, semi-open woodland surrounded by open country, though they are less likely to inhabit heavily wooded habitats.[4][8] South African eagle-owls are not infrequently found around floodplains and marshes, which may provide the primary nesting habitat in some areas.[41] In Uganda, they are largely associated with riparian woodlands.[42][43] Verreaux's eagle-owl may live at nearly all elevations, from sea level to near the snow-line at around 3,000 m (9,800 ft) in elevation, such as in the Eastern Rift mountains. However, in general, they only sporadically inhabit rocky areas and so are generally very scarce in mountainous regions.[4] The bushveld of southern Africa is near ideal habitat for Verreaux's eagle-owl and the species may be found at near peak numbers here.[8] The species was historically rare to absent from the Kalahari desert, but the introduction by man of invasive trees like conifers, eucalyptus and acacias, irrigation areas and prey species has allowed them to spottily occupy this region.[8][44][45]

Behavior edit

 
Verreaux's eagle-owls spend daytime resting at a roost, which is almost always an ample tree branch

Verreaux's eagle-owls are nocturnal birds and roost by day in trees, with large, shaded horizontal branches of tall, old trees being preferred.[4] In Kenya, the most often-used perch trees were Croton megalocarpus and invasive Eucalyptus.[5] Elsewhere, Acacia trees may be used habitually.[46] Despite normally choosing dense foliage to rest in, sometimes they may sit wherever their hunting path ends from the prior night, including relatively exposed perches.[4][24] They reportedly sleep rather lightly and will awaken very quickly to defend themselves from attack in daylight hours.[24] Family groups consisting of breeding pairs and their offspring frequently roost together and may engage in allopreening during this time.[4] Reportedly some family groups include eagle-owls that had hatched up to three years prior, which if accurate is exceptional for any type of owl species.[8][47] During extremely hot days, this species may flutter its throat for cooling purposes and has been known to bathe in rain and shallow water during extreme heat in the middle of the afternoon but usually drinks when possible during nighttime.[4] Each breeding pair of Verreaux's eagle-owl defends a territory and these may be extremely large, ranging in size up to 7,000 ha (17,000 acres).[8]

Food and feeding edit

 
An eagle-owl in Kruger National Park swallowing a snake

Verreaux's eagle-owl is considered an avian apex predator, meaning it is at or near the top of the food chain and healthy adults normally have no natural predators. In many known aspects of its hunting behaviour, it is typical of the members of the genus Bubo. This species hunts predominantly in early evening; however, they have been observed to swoop on prey during daylight.[4] They usually fly to a different perch from their daytime roost to use as their habitual hunting perch.[4] Verreaux's eagle-owls mainly hunt by gliding down on their prey from a perch. However, hunting on the wing has been reported, even of flying insects.[5] On occasion, they hunt by flying low over a bush to catch prey by surprise or dash on the wing into dense foliage or through forests to catch a galago or other arboreal prey item.[4] They will also sometimes run after prey on the ground, flapping their wings rapidly as they walk, or wade into shallow waters to pin down fish. The wing size of eagle-owls in general limits their flying speed and abilities in the open and so they require perches to execute most of their hunting behaviour.[12][48]

Even among the Bubo owls, most species of which are known to be highly opportunistic predators with indiscriminating diets, the Verreaux's eagle-owl is a particularly opportunistic predator. While earlier studies characterized great horned owl, one of the most well-studied members of the genus Bubo, as hunting whatever random species they first come across,[49] more modern dietary studies have contrarily shown their prey selection is not completely random and that regionally they selected cottontails and hares as prey instead of other foods regardless of prey population trends and became regional specialists on such prey, to such an extent that it predictably causes owl population declines at times when leporid numbers decline.[50][51] Furthermore, species-wide, great horned owls may select mammals as prey nearly 88% of the time.[33] In contrast, studies have indicated that for the Verreaux's eagle-owl only around 56% of its diet is mammals and no single prey type predictably dominates their prey selection by biomass in multiple regions.[5][48] To date, more than 100 prey species have been counted for this eagle-owl and, with only about half a dozen comprehensive dietary studies known to have been conducted, this probably only represents a small portion of the total prey selected.[48] Estimated prey size for the species has ranged from insects weighing less than 5 g (0.18 oz) to ungulates weighing at least 10 kg (22 lb). This is the second broadest size range positively attributed to a single owl species for prey items after the Eurasian eagle-owl and the largest exceptional upper prey-size also after the Eurasian species.[6][48][52][53]

Mammals edit

The prey type most often associated with Verreaux's eagle-owl are hedgehogs. It appears that this species is the only routine predator of hedgehogs in Africa, most other predators of small-to-medium-sized mammals choosing to pursue other abundant mammals without the hedgehog's prickly defenses.[54] In both the southernmost, from the western cape of South Africa, and northernmost, a partial study of the foods at nests in central Mali, food studies for this species have found hedgehogs to be the most significant contributor of biomass in Verreaux's eagle-owl nests.[37][48] The two known hedgehog prey species taken are the four-toed hedgehog (Atelerix albiventris), which averages 335 g (11.8 oz) in adults, in the north and the southern African hedgehog (Atelerix frontalis), which averages 350 g (12 oz) in adults, in the south.[55][56] When capturing hedgehogs, the eagle-owl descends silently with its soft-comb wings and ambushes the hedgehog by imbedding its talons about the face. After death, the hedgehog is skinned of its prickly back before being consumed by either the eagle-owl itself or the young at the nest. This may result in over a dozen hedgehog skins being found around Verreaux's eagle-owl roosts near their nests.[8][37][48][57] The same method of dealing with hedgehogs is utilized by the Eurasian eagle-owl, which is likewise reported as the only routine predator of hedgehogs in its native continent.[4][58] Studies in other areas have shown that, while hedgehogs are seemingly taken opportunistically, they are at best secondary as contributors of prey both in quantity and biomass.[6][46]

 
A southern African hedgehog, a common prey item for Verreaux's eagle-owls

In general, the diet of Verreaux's eagle-owl is seemingly random and highly variable. Eagle-owl species from temperate zones may have no choice but to predate rodents which are rather small and this may require a nesting pair to capture up to a dozen rodents nightly.[33][59][60] In comparison, the diversity and abundance of rodents is considerably greater in wild areas of sub-Saharan Africa and the Verreaux's eagle-owl seemingly ignores most small rodent species, with no rodent prey species known to average under 30 g (1.1 oz) in adult body mass.[5][6][46][48] In Kenya, the most often recorded prey locally were Tachyoryctes mole-rats; however, these were recorded only slightly more often than other genera or species, including non-mammals.[5] Several species of blesmol, a separate family also sometimes referred to as mole-rats, have also been recorded as prey.[6][46][61] Several murid species have been hunted ranging in size from the 31 g (1.1 oz) southern multimammate mouse (Mastomys coucha) to the two non-native Rattus species, including the 360 g (13 oz) brown rat (Rattus norvegicus).[5][6][62][63][64] Some larger rodents they've hunted have included the 529 g (1.2 lb) cape ground squirrel (Xerus inauris), the 786 g (1.7 lb) Gambian pouched rat (Cricetomys qambianus) and the 1,900 g (4.2 lb) lesser cane rat (Thryonomys gregorianus).[5][63][65] The largest known rodent prey is the South African springhare (Pedetes capensis) at an average adult weight of 3,040 g (6.7 lb).[48][63] Avery, et al. (1985) opined that springhares may be only taken as carrion as they claim it be too large for the eagle-owl to overpower and indeed at least one South African springhare was fed on as roadkilled carrion. However, Avery, et al. (1985) also acknowledged that adult monkeys of larger size have verifiably been taken alive by the eagle-owls, so it certainly should not be ruled out that they also take live springhares.[6][48]

Many other mammals taken as prey by Verreaux's eagle-owl are seemingly any encountered except the much larger species, especially those that show a propensity for nocturnal or crepuscular activity. This species has hunted bats in several cases from the 8.1 g (0.29 oz) Lander's horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus landeri), the smallest known vertebrate prey species known for this eagle-owl, to Rousettus fruit bats that weigh over 150 g (5.3 oz).[66] Most other mammalian prey recorded or inferred as hunted by Verreaux's eagle-owl tend to be considerably larger. Both the scrub hare (Lepus saxatilis) and the cape hare (Lepus capensis) have been reported as food, the scrub species estimated to average 2,740 g (6.0 lb) when taken.[6][48] In parts of Kenya, the scrub hare can be a particularly significant contributor of biomass to the eagle-owl's diet.[67] Other assorted mammalian prey species include the 540 g (1.2 lb) golden-rumped elephant shrew (Rhynchocyon chrysopygus) and the 3,800 g (8.4 lb) cape hyrax (Procavia capensis), although it is possible that juvenile hyraxes are rather more commonly taken than adults.[68][69][70]

So far as is known, Verreaux's eagle-owl is the only living owl that preys upon multiple species of primate, although isolated incidents of predation (normally on young primates) has been reported in two to three other large, tropical owls.[4][33][48][71] Multiple cases of predation against galagos have been reported, unsurprisingly as they represent all nocturnal primates in Africa, although they are seldom identified to species.[5][6] Known galago prey species have ranged from the 85.3 g (3.01 oz) Thomas's bushbaby (Galagoides thomasi) to the 1,098 g (2.4 lb) brown greater galago (Otolemur crassicaudatus).[5][72] Monkeys are also predated opportunistically. Particularly often reported in foods of the Verreaux's eagle-owl as primates go is the vervet monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus).[72][73][74] Incidents of successful predation have included vervets that were half-grown, which the eagle-owl was able to fly off with (despite being about as heavy as the eagle-owl itself), and an adult vervet of an estimated weight of 4,000 to 5,000 g (8.8 to 11.0 lb), which an eagle-owl took on the ground and subsequently dismembered.[5][46][48] However, considering the formidable gauntlet of predators that vervet monkeys face, the Verreaux's eagle-owl is one of its more minor predators and attacks on them may be considered incidental, due in part to the monkey's primarily diurnal activities.[75][76][77][78] Other monkey species believed to be occasionally vulnerable to attacks include the blue monkey (Cercopithecus mitis), which is similar in size to the vervet, patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas) and the young of the chacma baboon (Papio ursinus). Adult patas monkeys, averaging some 8,633 g (19.0 lb), can be even larger than vervet monkeys but whether they take prime adults of the species is questionable.[72][79][80][81]

There are a few verified cases of Verreaux's eagle-owls feeding on ungulates; however, some authors such as Avery, et al. (1985) feel that these generally represent cases of scavenging on carrion. The remains of an adult grysbok (Raphicerus melanotis), weighing an estimated 10,670 g (23.5 lb), was opined with certainty to have been taken as carrion per this study.[6] Steyn (1982) accepted that this species could take live prey weighing up to 10,000 g (22.0 lb) on rare occasions; however, he stated in a case of an adult common duiker (Sylvicapra grimmia) being fed on by an eagle-owl that the duiker was likely roadkill.[48] Scavenging on carrion is generally a rare behaviour in owls and has been reported in only a few cases where large owls are exceptionally hungry.[4][82] Live ungulates verified to have been hunted have included piglets of common warthogs (Phacochoerus africanus), which have an average birth weight of only 665 g (1.5 lb) but grow to over 2,000 g (4.4 lb) in just a couple weeks.[48][82][83] Adult Kirk's dik-diks (Madoqua kirkii), one of the smallest antelope species at an average of 4,590 g (10.1 lb) have also been hunted by Verreaux's eagle-owl.[84][85]

Among mammalian carnivores the bulk of predatory incidents have reportedly involved mongooses. Common, social species from savanna-edge such as the 710 g (1.6 lb) yellow mongoose (Cynictis penicillata) and the 725 g (1.6 lb) meerkats (Suricata suricatta) have been attacked, as well as larger, shy forest dwellers such as the 2,500 g (5.5 lb) Jackson's mongoose (Bdeogale jacksoni).[86][87] An adult Meller's mongoose (Rhynchogale melleri) weighing about 2,200 g (4.9 lb) which was taken by a Verreaux's eagle-owl on the wing represents the second heaviest known object successfully flown with this species after the aforementioned half-grown vervet monkey.[82] Other smallish carnivores known to fall prey to Verreaux's eagle-owls include the 292 g (10.3 oz) African striped weasel (Poecilogale albinucha) and its larger cousin, the 817 g (1.8 lb) striped polecat (Ictonyx striatus), which in one nest from the border of the Kalahari represented the sole prey species for a pair of eagle-owls.[6][88][89][90] In southern Africa, both the cape genet (Genetta tigrina), averaging 1,732 g (3.8 lb), and the 1,600 g (3.5 lb) black-footed cat (Felis nigripes), the smallest felid in Africa, have been included amongst their prey.[91][92][93][94] The Verreaux's eagle-owl is thought to be a threat to even larger carnivores, including the 4,150 g (9.1 lb) bat-eared fox (Otocyon megalotis) and the 10,000 g (22.0 lb) aardwolf (Proteles cristata), although whether healthy adults of the latter are in danger is doubtful.[95][96][97][98][99] A scientifically-observed attack on an adult male African wildcat (Felis silvestris cafra), which can weigh more than about 4,500 g (9.9 lb), was aborted after the eagle-owl apparently deemed that the felid was too heavy to take flight with.[100] However, domesticated cats of any size may fall prey to Verreaux's eagle-owl. At Lake Baringo Country Club in Kenya, this eagle-owl has apparently taken to habitually hunting outdoor cats, reportedly making the cats on the grounds highly skittish.[101]

Birds edit

 
A South African study showed the black-headed heron as the most important prey by biomass for Verreaux's eagle-owls.

Verreaux's eagle-owl takes a diverse range of birds as prey. More than 50 avian prey species have been identified and they may locally exceed mammals in importance in the diet, somewhat unusually for eagle-owls.[6][33] No one type of bird can be said to be predictably favored as prey and any avian species unfortunate enough to have a nighttime roost or nest that happens to be in an eagle-owl's foraging path may fall victim to this species. Many cases of predation involve nest robbery, with nestlings or fledglings being taken, although adult birds may be taken just as often, especially for species with less conspicuous nests.[5][6][48] In South Africa's De Hoop Nature Reserve, it was found that birds were somewhat better represented by both number, 43.3% of remains, and biomass, 57.84% of remains, than mammals or any other prey group. The species best represented in biomass in the prior study was the black-headed heron (Ardea melanocephala) with several adults estimated to average 1,260 g (2.8 lb) being found among the prey remains.[6] Other fairly common, largish herons are also known to fall prey at night to Verreaux's eagle-owl including the 873 g (1.9 lb) common egret (Ardea alba), the 1,443 g (3.2 lb) grey heron (Ardea cinerea) and the 975 g (2.1 lb) purple heron (Ardea purpurea).[15][101][102]

Other medium-sized water birds known to have been represented in this species diet include the 1,008 g (2.2 lb) yellow-billed duck (Anas undulata), the 983 g (2.2 lb) African black duck (Anas sparsa), the 596 g (1.3 lb) African swamphen (Porphyrio madagascariensis) and the 825 g (1.8 lb) red-knobbed coot (Fulica cristata).[5][6][103] Besides herons, another well-represented group of birds in the diet are galliforms. Perhaps the most widely preyed species reported from this group is the 1,229 g (2.7 lb) helmeted guineafowl (Numida meleagris), which may seasonally dominate the eagle-owl's food in Kenya.[48][67] More modestly sized wild galliform species reported in the diet including the 96 g (3.4 oz) common quail (Coturnix coturnix) and the 390 g (14 oz) grey-winged francolin (Francolinus africanus).[6][15] Domestic fowl, especially those allowed back to a semi-feral state and thus sleeping in the open as is prevalent in Africa, are taken when encountered, including chickens and peafowls.[48][104]

Various upland birds recorded as prey include the 177 g (6.2 oz) Namaqua sandgrouse (Pterocles namaqua), the 350 g (12 oz) rock pigeon (Columba livia), the 84 g (3.0 oz) laughing dove (Streptopelia senegalensis), the 169 g (6.0 oz) Senegal coucal (Centropus senegalensis), the 49 g (1.7 oz) scaly-throated honeyguide (Indicator variegatus) and several species of hornbill, ranging in size from the 139 g (4.9 oz) northern red-billed hornbill (Tockus erythrorhynchus) to the 1,235 g (2.7 lb) silvery-cheeked hornbill (Bycanistes brevis).[6][15][37][82][105][106] Among passerines, the most frequently taken are likely to be corvids, which are often favored by Bubo owls from around the world due to their large size, relatively open nests and frequently easy-to-find, communal nocturnal roosts. To date the cape crow (Corvus capensis) and pied crow (Corvus albus) are the corvids reported in dietary studies. In Ethiopia, thick-billed ravens (Corvus crassirostris), which at 1,500 g (3.3 lb) are possibly the heaviest corvid species in the world, mobbed them vigorously and seemed to consider them a primary threat.[5][6][107] Smaller passerines are by no means ignored.[108][109] White-eyes are among the more frequently taken smaller passerines, with the 10.9 g (0.38 oz) southern yellow white-eye (Zosterops anderssoni) being the smallest identified avian prey species, although penduline tits (Anthoscopus ssp.) are likely to be even smaller.[5][6][48][110] The largest bird to be hunted by Verreaux's eagle-owl is complicated by the fact that they often take relatively small nestlings of larger species, such as ostriches (Struthio camelus) and grey crowned cranes (Balearica regulorum).[48] The only avian prey items successfully attacked larger than other types of birds of prey (reviewed later) are likely bustards.[4][6][48] Most predation records have reported on relatively small bustards, namely northern (Afrotis afraoides) and southern black korhaans (Afrotis afra), which average only 745 g (1.6 lb) and 690 g (1.5 lb), respectively.[48][111] Larger species of bustard thought to be threatened by Verreaux's eagle-owl are the 4,790 g (10.6 lb) Denham's bustard (Neotis denhami) and the 8,430 g (18.6 lb) kori bustard (Ardeotis kori), although it is not clear whether adults (especially males) are attacked in the latter species.[48][111][112]

Other prey edit

 
A Verreaux's eagle-owl near a flying moth, which can be as likely prey as a much larger item

Reptiles and amphibians are occasional prey for Verreaux's eagle-owls. Various snakes have been included in their diet ranging from the small, innocuous brown house snake (Boaedon fuliginosus) at 31 g (1.1 oz) to large and venomous Egyptian cobras (Naja haje) weighing over 454 g (1.0 lb).[5][6][113] Frogs were amongst the prominent prey recorded for suburban-breeding eagle-owls in South Africa, namely the African red toad (Schismaderma carens) and the guttural toad (Amietophrynus gutturalis). Unidentified frogs were fairly significant in the diet from Kenya.[5][104][114] The largest herpetological prey known is the Nile monitor (Varanus niloticus), at a mean mature mass of 5,850 g (12.9 lb), these primarily diurnal reptiles can provide a fulfilling meal but can be hard to subdue even if ambushed unaware.[48][82][115][116]

Predation on fish has been reported but no fish have been observed firsthand in dietary studies.[48] A surprisingly wide range of invertebrates have been reported in the diet for this species. In some cases, they may prey on insects as small as termites and even smaller invertebrates have been recorded in pellets such as oribatid mites and Sarcophaga flies, but are likely consumed incidentally while eating a larger item, either from carrion or the stomach of the prey itself.[6][117] Unidentified scorpions, spiders and millipedes have also been reported in their foods.[5][48] Most attacks on insects involve large ground beetles or dung beetles. Verreaux's eagle-owl has been known to feed on dung beetles among herds of African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) by night, boldly diving below the massive bovids’ legs, and will readily feed on beetles among elephant dung when available.[6][118][119]

Interspecies predatory relations edit

Sub-Saharan Africa has many species of owl, although there is less species diversity than in some areas of similar latitude in the neotropics and south Asia.[4][12] It also hosts the most species of eagle-owl with approximately eight "typical" Bubo species and all three fishing owl species as well.[4][48] Due to the diversity here, there are a number of distinctions between habitat preference, primary prey types and body size among the eagle-owls of Africa.[52][82] The three smallest species of this genus reside solely in Africa, the akun eagle-owl (Ketupa leucosticta), the greyish eagle-owl (Bubo cinerascens) and the spotted eagle-owl (Bubo africanus), in rough order of increasing size. These species are all primarily insectivores and are much reduced in the size and strength of their feet and talons compared to most other contemporary species, although the spotted eagle-owl can be locally specialized to feed on small rodents as well.[4][12][27][120] While the akun is a primary forest-dweller as are the medium-sized Fraser's and Usambara eagle-owl and large Shelley's eagle-owl and thus is not likely to co-exist with Verreaux's eagle-owls except in rare cases, the northerly-distributed greyish eagle-owl (which was at one point considered merely a subspecies of the spotted) and the southerly-distributed spotted eagle-owl have much more similar habitat preferences to the Verreaux's species.[4][48][121][122] Of the non-piscivorous owls in Africa, the Cape eagle-owl can have a somewhat broad diet and a capability to take large prey but is more specialized to feed on a narrow range of mammals, mole-rats often supplemented with rock hyrax, than the Verreaux's eagle-owl.[48][82][123] The Cape eagle-owl has a fairly strong preference for nesting and hunting within the confines of rocky and mountainous habitats, whereas the Verreaux's is at best sporadic in such areas.[5][124][125][126] In east Africa and South Africa, habitat degradation has allowed the more adaptable Verreaux's eagle-owl to move into areas inhabited by cape eagle-owls and has presented the possible issue of the Verreaux's competitively excluding the smaller species.[124][127]

 
Other owls such as African grass owls may fall victim to predation by Verreaux's eagle-owls.

Outside of the genus Bubo, other owls in Africa are much smaller than Verreaux's eagle-owls and are more likely to be viewed as prey than competition. Among the small-to-mid-sized owls that have fallen prey to this species are the barn owl (Tyto alba) and the African grass owl (Tyto capensis), both of which average around 419 g (14.8 oz) in body mass in Africa, the 334 g (11.8 oz) marsh owl (Asio capensis) and the 216 g (7.6 oz) southern white-faced owl (Ptilopsis granti).[5][15][33][48][101] The only verified interactions with other typical eagle-owls have been predatory, as the 645 g (1.4 lb) spotted eagle-owl has been recorded among their prey in a few cases.[5][48] There are several owls with broadly similar habitat preferences from African scops owls (Otus senegalensis) to African wood owls (Strix woodfordii) that have not been reported as food but are almost certainly occasionally threatened by Verreaux's eagle-owls.[48][82] As is commonly the case with eagle-owls, the Verreaux's eagle-owl is perhaps the most serious predatory threat to diurnal raptors in its range, most often ambushing raptors on their prominent nests upon nightfall and freely killing birds of prey of any age from nestlings to adults. Such prey is not quantitatively significant as a food source but since raptors as a rule are sparsely distributed the habitual visitation of a single or pair of Verreaux's eagle-owl can potentially be devastating to a local population.[6][33][48] Among the species of small-to-medium-sized raptors known to be attacked are the 638 g (1.4 lb) African harrier-hawk (Polyboroides typus), the 675 g (1.5 lb) pale chanting goshawk (Melierax canorus), the 507 g (1.1 lb) African marsh harrier (Circus ranivorus), the 110 g (3.9 oz) scissor-tailed kite (Chelictinia riocourii), the 291.5 g (0.6 lb) African goshawk (Accipiter tachiro) the 875 g (1.9 lb) common buzzard (Buteo buteo) and the 640 g (1.4 lb) Wahlberg's eagle (Hieraaetus wahlbergi).[5][6][48][82][128]

There are reports of Verreaux's eagle-owls attacking even larger raptorial birds. A case of the Verreaux's eagle-owl killing an adult Pel's fishing owl in Botswana was verified. At roughly 2,000 g (4.4 lb) in body mass, the fishing owl is of nearly the same size as the eagle-owl.[129] Cases where they've attacked the nests of particularly large diurnal birds of prey have sometimes involved only nestlings being victimized, such as attacks on the hooded vulture (Necrosyrtes monachus) and the bateleur (Terathopius ecaudatus); none of the adults, which are about the same average adult body mass as the Verreaux's eagle-owls, have been reported as prey.[48][130] However, in some even larger birds of prey, adults as well as nestlings and fledglings have been killed. Successful nighttime attacks have been reported on adults of the 2,810 g (6.2 lb) African fish eagle (Haliaeetus vocifer) and the 4,017 g (8.9 lb) secretarybird (Sagittarius serpentarius).[48] In the Matobo Hills of Zimbabwe, the Verreaux's eagle-owl has been considered as one of the inferred predators of 4,195 g (9.2 lb) Verreaux's eagle (Aquila verreauxii), although whether adults or only nestlings are vulnerable is not definitely clear.[131][132]

Other than these rare cases, larger birds of prey such as eagles are not usually harassed by Verreaux's eagle-owl and are more aptly viewed as competitors. In fact, the martial eagle (Polemaetus bellicosus) is sometimes regarded as the diurnal ecological equivalent of the Verreaux's eagle-owl.[103] The martial eagle has rather similar habitat preferences to the eagle-owl and has a similarly broad, opportunistic diet.[48][133][134] At roughly 4,200 g (9.3 lb) in average body mass, the martial eagle is roughly twice as heavy as Verreaux's eagle-owl and takes correspondingly large prey, its average prey weight range being 1,000 to 5,000 g (2.2 to 11.0 lb) and the eagles are capable of exceptionally taking prey up to nearly nine times their own weight, whereas most of the eagle-owls prey does not exceed 1,000 to 1,500 g (2.2 to 3.3 lb). Verreaux's eagle-owl is likely to give martial eagles a respectful space during daytime and there are no records of the two species harassing one another.[6][15][48][135] Another particularly large and aggressive eagle, the crowned eagle (Stephanoaetus coronatus), is largely a forest-dweller and so is less directly a diurnal equivalent. There is a single recorded instance of an immature crowned eagle being aggressively displaced at night by an adult Verreaux's eagle-owl when it happened to encroach on the eagle-owl's territory but without bloodshed and eagle-owls would do well to avoid the exceptionally powerful eagle.[48][135][136] Taken together, the Verreaux's, the Shelley's and the Cape eagle-owls could be seen as nocturnally replacing the eagle species of martial, crowned and Verreaux's eagles in the respective habitats of savanna, forest and rocky areas but their increasingly diminishing size in comparison to the diurnal eagles means that, generally speaking, less large-bodied prey is likely to be attacked.[48][82][135][137] Despite its place near the top of the nocturnal avian food chain, in 2013 a remote wildlife camera videotaped a black-backed jackal (Canis mesomelas) attacking and killing a Verreaux's eagle owl at a watering hole.[138] Similar rare successful attacks on great horned owls and Eurasian eagle-owls by smaller red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) have been reported, but in these cases the horned owl was mysteriously grounded and the eagle-owl was nesting in too-easily accessed sea cliffs. More often foxes are prey rather than predators for northern Bubo owls.[139][140][141][142][143] Given that the Verreaux's eagle-owl is surprisingly bold about coming to their ground to, among other things capture beetles, feed on prey too large to carry in flight or, as is likely the case in the jackal attack, drink water, it is possible that the jackal was simply able to ambush an incautious eagle-owl rather than a grounded one.[48][138] Perhaps even more unexpectedly, an adult bateleur was filmed killing a Verreaux's eagle-owl by day, though whether this was predation or a competitive or anti-predatory attack is unclear.[144]

Breeding edit

 
A Verreaux's eagle-owl is disturbed during the day; adult birds frequently defend their territory and nest at any time of the day or year.

In the heart of their distribution, i.e. east Africa, breeding activity in this species can peak any time from February to September, but can occur nearly any month at the species level.[4][145] The timing of breeding is said to be correspondent roughly to the regional dry season, so averages earlier in the northern part of the range (before February) and later (July to September) in the southern part of the range such as Kenya and South Africa.[5][37][48] In the northern part of the range, breeding season commenced in November in Mali, in November and December in Senegal, December in Equatorial Guinea and January in Nigeria.[37][146] The monogamous pair is quite stable, most likely mating for life. As in most owls, a courtship display is both to establish mates for a newly mature pair of eagle-owls or to strength pair bonds prior to nesting.[4][8][82] Vocalizations during courtship displays consist of relatively rapid and excited calling, hooting and whining. The pair during courtship will bow to one another, flick open their wings and preen each other's feathers, with the male taking the more active part in the courtship ritual.[4][8] Like all raptorial birds, Verreaux's eagle-owls are strongly territorial.[48] The pair will defend their territory by their song and sometimes (though rarely) through duets. The territories of Verreaux's eagle-owls can range up to 7,000 hectares in size, although average territory sizes are seemingly unknown.[4][8][48]

Like great horned owls, but unlike Eurasian eagle-owls, the Verreaux's eagle-owls normally uses old nests built by other birds as their own nests. Usage of a nest site other than those constructed by other birds is considered rarer even than in the horned owl and is viewed as almost exceptional in some parts of this species range.[4][5][37] Existent reports of this species building its own nest are certain to be dubious, as no known living owl builds a nest and only a small handful of owl species have been verified adding a small amount of nesting material to an existing surface or nest.[4][5] They variety of bird nests they use is extreme. Large stick nests in sturdy trees are generally used.[4] In southern Africa, recorded nest heights have ranged from 6 to 25 m (19 ft 8 in to 82 ft 0 in) off the ground.[48] Like other Bubo owls, the large nest of large-bodied accipitrids are often popular for use, due to the often huge size and sturdiness of construction typical in this family, with the nest builders devoting up to four months to their construction.[147] However, perhaps the constructor of nests that most often host Verreaux's eagle-owls are hamerkops (Scopus umbretta). In everywhere from Mali to South Africa the eagle-owl has been recorded using old nests built by this species.[37][48] The unusual, massive nest is an enclosed circle of sticks with a side entrance that are often very large relative to the size of the hamerkop, a smallish, compact wading bird. Usually the eagle-owls nest on the flat top of the hamerkop nest rather than the interior which is usually too small for the eagle-owls to enter and this can provide a rather safe structure for the eagle-owl family to call home.[37][48]

Other nest builders which are popular as hosts are vultures, eagles (at least eight species have built nests used by these eagle-owls), secretarybirds, crows and even much smaller birds such as weavers, which build huge communal nest structures which the eagle-owls then similarly nest on top of.[4][5][37][48][148] Most nests are already abandoned when the Verreaux's eagle-owl take over it, in large accipitrids for example, many build alternate nests which are not used for years on end.[48] However, if the nest is occupied, the Verreaux's eagle-owl pair readily displaces the occupants and sometimes feeds on the birds in them.[48] Species known to be successfully displaced from their nests have ranged up in size to lappet-faced vultures (Torgos tracheliotos), which are more than three times heavier on average than the Verreaux's eagle-owl.[48] In some cases, hamerkops have been known to try to defend their nest from the eagle-owls but are usually chased away.[5] Verreaux's eagle-owls have been known to displace other opportunistic nest usurpers such as other owls and falcons in order to take over nest structures for themselves.[5][37][149] In one case, a pair of eagle-owls nested on top of a hamerkop nest while the interior of the nest was occupied by Egyptian geese (Alopochen aegyptiacus), an unusual aggressive species of waterfowl that uses nests built by other species.[48] In rare cases, Verreaux's eagle-owls have been recorded using large, old hollows, the stem of a palm tree or on a very dense tangle of creepers or orchids instead of birds' nests as a nesting site.[4][48][110]

On average, the female lays two white eggs, which typically measure 62.6 mm × 51.4 mm (2.46 in × 2.02 in), with a range in height of 58 to 66 mm (2.3 to 2.6 in) and a range in width of 48 to 54 mm (1.9 to 2.1 in).[4][48][150] The eggs weigh from 93 to 101.6 g (3.28 to 3.58 oz), the upper weight being the mean mass of the first egg and the lower weight being the mean mass of the second egg.[4][12] The eggs are reportedly laid at up to 7 day intervals and may take up nearly seven days as well between hatching.[4] Most nest reportedly contain two eggs, but some may contain only one, and no more than two has been recorded in this species.[4][48][151] The adult female incubates the eggs for 33 to 39 days, the incubation stage being slightly longer than those of most other eagle-owls, at least the more northern species.[4][37] On average at hatching, the young weigh about 60 to 70 g (2.1 to 2.5 oz).[4] The weight of the nestling can triple within five days after hatching.[37] Due to the extreme interval between the hatching of the first and the second egg, the older owlet is always considerably larger than the second. As is widely reported in different kinds of raptorial birds, the smaller chick usually dies in the nest.[152] This may be due to starvation upon being outcompeted for food by the older chick or the smaller chick may be being attacked and killed by its older sibling. Usually the smaller chick is gone within two weeks after hatching in this species.[4][48][128] In rare cases, both chicks are reared and survive to leave the nest, although there are no known cases of two fledglings resulting from a Verreaux's eagle-owl nest in southern Africa.[37][48] The young are covered in off-white down from hatching on and the pink eyelids may become apparent within the first week of life.[4][37] By three weeks of age, the chicks down will thicken and darken to a greyish colour with some barring present.[48] By six weeks, the young eagle-owl will start to somewhat resemble an adult, replete with the blackish brackets on the facial disc of the adult but still being fairly downy, particularly about the head. Only a week later, almost all the down is likely to be moulted.[37][48]

The mother Verreaux's eagle-owl remains on the nest for nearly the entire incubation period while the male hunts for food for both of them. During the brooding stage, which lasts about 20 days after hatching, the female is still fed by the male, but resumes hunting thereafter.[4] During the incubation and brooding stage, the male usually roosts near the nest during the day while the female continually sits about the nest.[48] After the brooding stage, the female normally takes to a perch within a dozen or so metres of the nest.[37] Both parents may use a favor perch near the nest at which they dismantle prey into pieces that can be more easily consumed by their young, these may be called "plucking" perches where birds are more commonly eaten or "peeling" perches where hedgehogs are the most regular prey. Most dietary studies for the species have been from researching the pellets and skins under such perches.[48][128] The female is an extremely tight sitter both while incubating and brooding, and may not even be displaced from the nest even if shouted at or the tree is struck.[5][48] When intruders approach too closely, including other eagle-owls, potential predators and humans, the most common response of the parent Verreaux's eagle-owl is to grunt lowly, often raising its ear-tufts and bill-clapping.[4][5] Both sexes may engage in distraction displays when the area near the nest is encroached, but it usually the male and most displays occur during nighttime but are possible at any time of day or night. During such displays, the adult will fly lover the ground with drooping wings, or alights and drags its wings and flaps about, often while bill-clacking and calling.[5][48] Similar injury-feigning distraction displays have been recorded in the Eurasian eagle-owl and smaller owl species but are not known in most other Bubo species.[33][153] In one case, feral dogs were successfully lured away from a young Verreaux's eagle-owl by its parents’ distraction display after the young bird had fallen to the ground.[48] In rare cases, the parent eagle-owls will attack interlopers. In one such case, a person who picked up a young eagle-owl on the ground was severely injured after both parents attacked him.[4][48]

 
A Verreaux's eagle-owl "fledgling" such as this one often leaves the nest well before it can fly competently.

On average, the young Verreaux's eagle-owl leaves the nest at around 62–63 days but cannot fly at this point. It may take roughly anywhere from another two weeks to a month after this before the fledgling is a competent flier.[4][48] After leaving the nest, the fledgling is "remarkably inactive", making a minimum of effort to fly, and usually selecting a roost within a few feet of the nest which it has awkwardly climbed to or will drop to a large bush below the nest.[4][48] In the nest, the chick will beg for food with a shrill or chittering noise, sometimes bobbing its head or swaying about and transferring its weight between its feet (sometimes called a "hunger dance") and it continues to rely on its parents for food well after leaving the nest.[5][48] Sometimes after leaving the nest, the young eagle-owls are mobbed as are adults by other birds of prey and crows during the day, which is often heatedly directed at this species as adult eagle-owls regularly kill these birds at night. The young eagle-owl may dodge to denser branches to avoid being wounded during such attacks.[5] Young Verreaux's eagle-owls may fall to the ground, often as a result of mobbing. If the young bird is discovered on the ground, it may feign death, lying prone with its head lax and its eyes closed. Even if picked up while death-shamming, the young eagle-owl may remain moribund. Upon being left without disturbance after "playing dead", the young Verreaux's eagle-owl will gradually open its eyes and return to a normal state.[48]

It is not until they are about 5 months old do most young Verreaux's eagle-owl show the ability to capture prey for themselves. However, the stage at which the young of this species becomes independent appears remarkably variable. One ringed 9-month-old moved 24 km (15 mi) away from its nest area and was thus seemingly fully independent.[4] On the other hand, Verreaux's eagle-owls of over half-a-year in age who presumably can fly and hunt on their own have been seen to linger and continue to beg its parents to be fed into the next breeding season, and may even be fed by their father while he is also feeding the mother and a new nestling.[48] In Kenya, when a biologist fed a wild juvenile eagle-owl mole-rats and chicken heads in its nest area, the young eagle-owl apparently became remarkably confiding towards the person.[46] The tendency of young eagle-owls to linger into the next breeding season sometimes results in "family groups" roosting together, a very unusual occurrence for an eagle-owl species. One such group consisted of five birds together, including two parents and three owls from the preceding past three years and apparently the younger eagle-owls even helped bring food for the chick once the egg hatched.[8][46][48]

On average, sexual maturity in Verreaux's eagle-owls appears to be attained at three to four years of age.[4] In most cases, a pair of Verreaux's eagle-owl is able to nest annually; however, in some cases they may nest only every two to three years, in probable situations of extreme food shortages.[4][48] Annual mortality appears to be fairly low in this large owl species. Few species have been reported to hunt Verreaux's eagle-owls short of the aforementioned jackal attack, even nests have rarely been seen to be predated, although they may on rare occasions run foul of some predators such as larger felids with the ability to climb.[46][48] That young birds usually leave the nest before they can fly would appear to endanger them but the threat and distraction display of parent eagle-owls are apparently often successful.[48] Adult eagle-owls can appear nearly fearless, as they have been reported to stand their ground and engage in threat displays when encountered on or near the ground against much larger animals such as rhinoceroses and lions, and in such cases are apparently not approached further by the bigger animals although the eagle-owls could easily be killed by such animals if contact was made.[5][46] The lifespan in the wild is not known; however, in captivity the species can live for over 15 years, and possibly up to 30 years in some cases.[4]

Status edit

 
An artist's rendering of a Verreaux's eagle-owl from 1838

Verreaux's eagle-owl is a seldom-encountered species, occurring at low densities and needing large territories for hunting and breeding purposes. The threats faced by this species are sadly typical of many large birds of prey from around the world. Not infrequently, they are locally rare due to persecution.[8][11] The normal cause of persecution is their possible status as predators of small domestic stock, though this is certain to be rare, at least in areas with substantial wild prey populations.[8][154] An additional threat is the residual effects of pesticides, as poison (usually through rodenticide or poisoned carcasses left out for scavengers such as jackals) consumed through prey may badly affect them.[4][155] They may be killed by flying into novel man-made objects, including wires and massive dams along reservoirs.[156][157][158]

Habitat destruction can also affect them, as they require ample trees with large bird nests in order to take residence in a given area.[8][159] In some areas, however, they've been shown to be able to nest in peri-urban or suburban areas, showing greater adaptability to human-based land changes than many other large birds of prey.[104][128] In Eswatini, the species is considered Near Threatened and the species has been recommended for threatened status in southern Africa overall.[160][161][162] In west Africa and central Africa, the habitat is often marginal for this species, the distribution is sporadic and thus this eagle-owl is only encountered either uncommonly or rarely.[1][37][82] The greatest regional stronghold for Verreaux's eagle-owls is seemingly east Africa, in countries such as Kenya, which may have numbers comparable to pre-colonial times.[5][82] At the species level, they are widespread and currently not considered to be threatened with extinction.[1][4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h BirdLife International (2016). "Bubo lacteus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T22688986A93212982. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T22688986A93212982.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  3. ^ a b c d Giant Eagle-Owl 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine, Arkive
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk König, C., & Weick, F. (2008). Owls of the World. A&C Black. ISBN 9780300142273.
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  162. ^ Jenkins, A. R. (2008). A proposed new list of the threatened raptors of southern Africa. Gabar, 19(1), 27-40.
  • Owls of the World by Konig, Weick & Becking. Yale University Press (2009), ISBN 9780300142273

External links edit

  • (Giant Eagle-Owl =) Verreaux's Eagle-Owl – Species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds.
  • Verreaux's Eagle-Owl videos, photos & sounds on the Internet Bird Collection

verreaux, eagle, ketupa, lactea, also, commonly, known, milky, eagle, giant, eagle, member, family, strigidae, this, species, widespread, saharan, africa, member, genus, ketupa, largest, african, measuring, total, length, this, eagle, resident, primarily, wood. Verreaux s eagle owl Ketupa lactea also commonly known as the milky eagle owl or giant eagle owl 3 is a member of the family Strigidae This species is widespread in sub Saharan Africa A member of the genus Ketupa it is the largest African owl measuring up to 66 cm 26 in in total length This eagle owl is a resident primarily of dry wooded savanna Verreaux s eagle owl is mainly grey in color and is distinguishable from other large owls by its bright pink eyelids a feature shared with no other owl species in the world 4 Verreaux s eagle owlFrom Etosha National ParkConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix II CITES 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder StrigiformesFamily StrigidaeGenus KetupaSpecies K lacteaBinomial nameKetupa lactea Temminck 1820 Verreaux s eagle owl is a highly opportunistic predator equipped with powerful talons Just over half of its known diet is composed of mammals but equal or even greater numbers of birds and even insects may be hunted locally along with any other appropriately sized prey that is encountered 5 6 This species is considered of Least Concern by IUCN as it occurs over a wide range and has shown some adaptability to human based alterations and destruction of habitat and adaptability to diverse prey when a primary prey species declines in a region As a large highly territorial species of owl it does however occur at fairly low densities and some regional declines have been reported 1 4 The common name commemorates the French naturalist Jules Verreaux The type specimen that was later described by Temminck at the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie was collected by Verreaux while he was still in his teens 7 8 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Voice 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behavior 5 Food and feeding 5 1 Mammals 5 2 Birds 5 3 Other prey 5 4 Interspecies predatory relations 6 Breeding 7 Status 8 References 9 External linksTaxonomy edit nbsp A Verreaux s eagle owl during a rainstormThere are no known subspecies in the Verreaux s eagle owl and there is remarkably little variation in their appearance across their considerable distribution 5 Reportedly birds in the southern part of their range appear marginally larger on average but these size differences are quite subtle and may be considered as a mild case of Bergmann s rule 9 While genetic research has been undertaken for this species its closest living relative in the genus Ketupa is not fully clear At one time the Verreaux s eagle owl was mentioned as an owl with particularly mysterious genetic alliances among living owls 10 Per Konig amp Weick 2008 the species with studied genetic markers found to be most closely related are a dark eyed species pair of Asian eagle owls the spot bellied Ketupa nipalensis and barred eagle owls Ketupa sumatrana but these are not particularly closely related to the Verreaux s 4 Among species with available genomes to study for DNA characteristics it has been revealed that the fish owls in particular the brown fish owl Ketupa zeylonensis is the third most closely related species to the Verreaux s 11 Notably Konig amp Weick did not test the DNA of other African eagle owls that may bear relation to the Verreaux s eagle owl based largely on their solid dark brown eyes namely Fraser s Ketupa poensis greyish Bubo cinerascens and Shelley s eagle owl as opposed to other eagle owls which have yellow to orange irises Fraser s and Usambara eagle owls also have a small amount of bare skin around their eyes but this tends to bluish in color and is not nearly as extensive as the pink seen in Verreaux s 4 Other large owls native to Africa the fishing owls also have uniform dark brownish eyes and are sometimes included with the genus Bubo but how closely related they are to modern eagle owls is unclear 4 12 Pliocene fossil Bubo owls with clear similarities based on osteological characteristics to the modern Verreaux s eagle owl most are currently classified as Ketupa cf lactea from South Africa and Tanzania indicate that the Verreaux s eagle owl descended from slightly smaller ancestors that increased in size as they diversified from related species 13 14 Description edit nbsp At San Diego ZooDespite the alternative common name of giant eagle owl Verreaux s eagle owl is not the largest owl or eagle owl in the world It is however a very large and powerful owl species This species is both the largest owl found in Africa and the world s largest owl to occur in the tropics Among all the world s owls it is fourth heaviest living owl after Blakiston s fish owl Ketupa blakistoni the Eurasian eagle owl Bubo bubo and the tawny fish owl Ketupa flavipes In addition it is the fourth longest extant owl measured from the bill to the tip of the tail after the great gray Strix nebulosa Blakiston s fish and Eurasian eagle owls 4 15 16 17 Based on body mass and wing chord length Verreaux s eagle owl is about the same size as medium sized races of Eurasian eagle owl such as those from Central Asian steppe B b turcomanus and the Himalayas B b hemachalana slightly smaller than most northern Eurasian races considerably smaller than Siberian and Russian eagle owls and somewhat larger than the smallest Eurasian eagle owl subspecies such as those from the Iberian Peninsula B b hispanus and the Middle East B b omissus or nikolskii 18 19 20 21 22 nbsp The Verreaux s eagle owl s ear tufts can appear nearly absent Verreaux s eagle owl ranges from 58 to 66 cm 23 to 26 in in total length 3 23 This species has been reported as having an average wingspan of 140 cm 4 ft 7 in but Mikkola referenced this as the wingspan of a smaller male 3 24 12 The largest known wingspan from a wild female measured nearly 164 cm 5 ft 5 in 25 While female owls are almost always larger than males Verreaux s eagle owl stands out as one of the most sexually dimorphic living owl species some studies showing the female can average 35 heavier than the male In comparison the females of the nominate subspecies of Eurasian eagle owls and great horned owl Bubo virginianus are reported to average approximately 20 and 25 heavier than the males respectively 15 26 The full range of reported body mass in the species ranges from 1 615 to 2 000 g 3 6 to 4 4 lb in males against a body mass of 2 475 3 150 g 5 5 6 9 lb in females 4 27 28 In one study 4 males were found to have averaged 1 704 g 3 8 lb while 6 females averaged 2 625 g 5 8 lb 4 15 Another study found 5 males to have averaged approximately 1 700 g 3 7 lb while five females averaged 2 300 g 5 1 lb 3 29 Unusually large sizes have been claimed in captivity with claims that specimens measuring up to 75 cm 30 in in length and 200 cm 6 ft 7 in in wingspan but these are unverified and possibly misreported as these figures match the largest Eurasian eagle owls 22 Males heavier than any in the wild have been verified in captivity to weigh up to 2 200 g 4 9 lb 27 Among standard measurements the female is reported to measure from 447 to 490 mm 17 6 to 19 3 in averaging 465 mm 18 3 in in wing chord 230 to 273 mm 9 1 to 10 7 in in the tail while the same measurements in the male are from 420 to 490 mm 17 to 19 in averaging 448 mm 17 6 in and from 220 to 275 mm 8 7 to 10 8 in in tail length In both sexes the tarsus has measured 73 to 86 mm 2 9 to 3 4 in and the bill in a small sample 51 to 54 mm 2 0 to 2 1 in 4 27 Based on wing chord size compared to body mass and other linear dimensions the Verreaux s eagle owl averages somewhat larger in the size of its wings relative to its body size than most other eagle owls excluding the Asian fish owls which are also relatively long winged 4 27 nbsp The pink eyelids of a Verreaux s eagle owl are quite conspicuous when it is resting Overall Verreaux s eagle owl is a fairly uniform and somewhat pale gray with light and fine brownish vermiculations on the underside The back is more solidly light brown with white spots on the shoulder The oval facial disc is paler sometimes ranging into a whitish color than the rest of the front side of the bird with strong black borders bracketing either side One other feature that immediately distinguishes adult Verreaux s eagle owls in good light are its pink eyelids The ecological purpose of their colorful eyelids is not known however Brown 1965 opined that they replace the colorful yellow to orange eyes of eagle owls in breeding and territorial displays since they were very conspicuous in displaying males 4 5 30 Their eyes are dark brown in color and like all eagle owls they have ear tufts The ear tufts are blunter and smaller relative to those of other African eagle owls The ear tufts of this species are relatively subtle and can be missed in the field especially if they are held lax 8 In appearance they are quite easily distinguished if seen well They are much bigger and bulkier than most other co occurring owls The only eagle owl species in range that approaches its size is the Shelley s eagle owl Ketupa shelleyi which may but is not confirmed to co exist with the Verreaux s in northern Cameroon and the southern sliver of the Central African Republic most likely in forest edge and mosaics but that species is a much darker sooty colour overall with broad black bands on the underside Shelley s eagle owl also has considerably different habitat preferences preferring deep primary forests and is much more rarely observed in the wild 4 8 The next largest owl in sub Saharan Africa is the Cape eagle owl Bubo capensis The individual home ranges if not habitats of the Verreaux s and cape eagle owls may abut in nearly every part of the latter s distribution Even in its largest race Mackinder s eagle owl B c mackinderi the cape eagle owl is around 30 lighter in body mass on average than the Verreaux s eagle owl not to mention it being markedly different in almost all outward characteristics 4 27 Pel s fishing owl Scotopelia peli which occurs in west central and inland southern Africa and may co exist with the Verreaux s eagle owl in much of its range despite favoring wetland and riparian zones surrounded by wooded areas can attain similar sizes as the Verreaux s eagle owl but is dramatically different in color a rather brighter rufous cinnamon hue and lacks ear tufts 12 In combination the characteristics of their pink eyelids dark eyes relatively uniform plumage and extremely large size render the Verreaux s eagle owl as nearly unmistakable 4 12 31 Voice edit The call of the Verreaux s eagle owl is the deepest of any extant owl species and one of the deepest bird calls in the world averaging slightly deeper than the calls of the Blakiston s and brown fish owls Ketupu zeylonensis The calls of Eurasian eagle owls are less deep but are possibly louder and farther carrying 12 32 The male s song is an exceptionally deep gwok gwok gwonk gwokwokwok gwokwokwok gwonk The depth and quality of the song makes confusion by sound more likely with a leopard Panthera pardus than any other bird 5 The song is sometimes considered unmistakable 8 According to a study in Kenya the voice is considered the second deepest bird call after the southern ground hornbill Bucorvus leadbeateri though that species has a fairly croaking call reminiscent of a large frog and in recordings appears to have a less sonorous call 5 Apparently the song can carry up to 5 km 3 1 mi away on quiet nights 4 The female s call is similar but higher pitched as in all owls to some extent because the larger female tends to have a smaller syrinx 8 33 Like most Bubo owls breeding pairs not infrequently call together but they are not as well synchronized as the pair duets of spotted eagle owls Bubo africanus which are often found in nearby ranges 5 8 The alarm calls of both sexes are often a sonorous whok or hook but variable grunting notes and raspy screams also seem to indicate alarm 4 8 Both the female and the young engage in high piercing calls when begging for food at the nest at which time the male does the food capture 4 34 One other vocalization recorded has included a raspy drawn out shrooooo ooo eh apparently uttered as a distraction display mainly by the male near the nest 5 While sound is important to some degree for inner species relations and hunting behaviour to all owl species the Verreaux s eagle owl appears to have relatively small and uncomplicated ear openings compared to several smaller types of owl This indicates that the auditory senses are relatively unimportant in this species compared to vision 35 Distribution and habitat editVerreaux s eagle owl is found through most of sub Saharan Africa though it is absent from most of the deep rainforests The species is found at the highest densities in eastern and southern Africa As this species avoids primary forests it is found very spottily in west Africa Their western distribution includes The Gambia Senegal Guinea and Sierra Leone 1 31 Eastward from those countries to the Central African Republic the species is distributed in a narrow transitional zone between the Sahara and rainforests 1 Seemingly isolated populations occur in central Nigeria and central Mali 36 37 In south western Africa they range up to as far north as the southern parts of the Republic of the Congo and the Democratic Republic of the Congo through most of Namibia excluding the coastal regions and northern South Africa 1 11 In east Africa their distribution is more or less continuous from southern Sudan Eritrea and inland Somalia down to South Africa as far as the region of the city of Durban 1 38 39 40 This species inhabits mainly savanna with scattered trees and thorny vegetation Verreaux s eagle owls mainly inhabit rather dry regions some bordering semi arid areas 4 37 In central Mali for example near the extreme northwestern limit of the species range the habitat that hosts these owls averages less than 55 cm 22 in of rainfall annually 37 They also range into riverine forest adjacent to savanna and small semi open woodland surrounded by open country though they are less likely to inhabit heavily wooded habitats 4 8 South African eagle owls are not infrequently found around floodplains and marshes which may provide the primary nesting habitat in some areas 41 In Uganda they are largely associated with riparian woodlands 42 43 Verreaux s eagle owl may live at nearly all elevations from sea level to near the snow line at around 3 000 m 9 800 ft in elevation such as in the Eastern Rift mountains However in general they only sporadically inhabit rocky areas and so are generally very scarce in mountainous regions 4 The bushveld of southern Africa is near ideal habitat for Verreaux s eagle owl and the species may be found at near peak numbers here 8 The species was historically rare to absent from the Kalahari desert but the introduction by man of invasive trees like conifers eucalyptus and acacias irrigation areas and prey species has allowed them to spottily occupy this region 8 44 45 Behavior edit nbsp Verreaux s eagle owls spend daytime resting at a roost which is almost always an ample tree branchVerreaux s eagle owls are nocturnal birds and roost by day in trees with large shaded horizontal branches of tall old trees being preferred 4 In Kenya the most often used perch trees were Croton megalocarpus and invasive Eucalyptus 5 Elsewhere Acacia trees may be used habitually 46 Despite normally choosing dense foliage to rest in sometimes they may sit wherever their hunting path ends from the prior night including relatively exposed perches 4 24 They reportedly sleep rather lightly and will awaken very quickly to defend themselves from attack in daylight hours 24 Family groups consisting of breeding pairs and their offspring frequently roost together and may engage in allopreening during this time 4 Reportedly some family groups include eagle owls that had hatched up to three years prior which if accurate is exceptional for any type of owl species 8 47 During extremely hot days this species may flutter its throat for cooling purposes and has been known to bathe in rain and shallow water during extreme heat in the middle of the afternoon but usually drinks when possible during nighttime 4 Each breeding pair of Verreaux s eagle owl defends a territory and these may be extremely large ranging in size up to 7 000 ha 17 000 acres 8 Food and feeding edit nbsp An eagle owl in Kruger National Park swallowing a snakeVerreaux s eagle owl is considered an avian apex predator meaning it is at or near the top of the food chain and healthy adults normally have no natural predators In many known aspects of its hunting behaviour it is typical of the members of the genus Bubo This species hunts predominantly in early evening however they have been observed to swoop on prey during daylight 4 They usually fly to a different perch from their daytime roost to use as their habitual hunting perch 4 Verreaux s eagle owls mainly hunt by gliding down on their prey from a perch However hunting on the wing has been reported even of flying insects 5 On occasion they hunt by flying low over a bush to catch prey by surprise or dash on the wing into dense foliage or through forests to catch a galago or other arboreal prey item 4 They will also sometimes run after prey on the ground flapping their wings rapidly as they walk or wade into shallow waters to pin down fish The wing size of eagle owls in general limits their flying speed and abilities in the open and so they require perches to execute most of their hunting behaviour 12 48 Even among the Bubo owls most species of which are known to be highly opportunistic predators with indiscriminating diets the Verreaux s eagle owl is a particularly opportunistic predator While earlier studies characterized great horned owl one of the most well studied members of the genus Bubo as hunting whatever random species they first come across 49 more modern dietary studies have contrarily shown their prey selection is not completely random and that regionally they selected cottontails and hares as prey instead of other foods regardless of prey population trends and became regional specialists on such prey to such an extent that it predictably causes owl population declines at times when leporid numbers decline 50 51 Furthermore species wide great horned owls may select mammals as prey nearly 88 of the time 33 In contrast studies have indicated that for the Verreaux s eagle owl only around 56 of its diet is mammals and no single prey type predictably dominates their prey selection by biomass in multiple regions 5 48 To date more than 100 prey species have been counted for this eagle owl and with only about half a dozen comprehensive dietary studies known to have been conducted this probably only represents a small portion of the total prey selected 48 Estimated prey size for the species has ranged from insects weighing less than 5 g 0 18 oz to ungulates weighing at least 10 kg 22 lb This is the second broadest size range positively attributed to a single owl species for prey items after the Eurasian eagle owl and the largest exceptional upper prey size also after the Eurasian species 6 48 52 53 Mammals edit The prey type most often associated with Verreaux s eagle owl are hedgehogs It appears that this species is the only routine predator of hedgehogs in Africa most other predators of small to medium sized mammals choosing to pursue other abundant mammals without the hedgehog s prickly defenses 54 In both the southernmost from the western cape of South Africa and northernmost a partial study of the foods at nests in central Mali food studies for this species have found hedgehogs to be the most significant contributor of biomass in Verreaux s eagle owl nests 37 48 The two known hedgehog prey species taken are the four toed hedgehog Atelerix albiventris which averages 335 g 11 8 oz in adults in the north and the southern African hedgehog Atelerix frontalis which averages 350 g 12 oz in adults in the south 55 56 When capturing hedgehogs the eagle owl descends silently with its soft comb wings and ambushes the hedgehog by imbedding its talons about the face After death the hedgehog is skinned of its prickly back before being consumed by either the eagle owl itself or the young at the nest This may result in over a dozen hedgehog skins being found around Verreaux s eagle owl roosts near their nests 8 37 48 57 The same method of dealing with hedgehogs is utilized by the Eurasian eagle owl which is likewise reported as the only routine predator of hedgehogs in its native continent 4 58 Studies in other areas have shown that while hedgehogs are seemingly taken opportunistically they are at best secondary as contributors of prey both in quantity and biomass 6 46 nbsp A southern African hedgehog a common prey item for Verreaux s eagle owlsIn general the diet of Verreaux s eagle owl is seemingly random and highly variable Eagle owl species from temperate zones may have no choice but to predate rodents which are rather small and this may require a nesting pair to capture up to a dozen rodents nightly 33 59 60 In comparison the diversity and abundance of rodents is considerably greater in wild areas of sub Saharan Africa and the Verreaux s eagle owl seemingly ignores most small rodent species with no rodent prey species known to average under 30 g 1 1 oz in adult body mass 5 6 46 48 In Kenya the most often recorded prey locally were Tachyoryctes mole rats however these were recorded only slightly more often than other genera or species including non mammals 5 Several species of blesmol a separate family also sometimes referred to as mole rats have also been recorded as prey 6 46 61 Several murid species have been hunted ranging in size from the 31 g 1 1 oz southern multimammate mouse Mastomys coucha to the two non native Rattus species including the 360 g 13 oz brown rat Rattus norvegicus 5 6 62 63 64 Some larger rodents they ve hunted have included the 529 g 1 2 lb cape ground squirrel Xerus inauris the 786 g 1 7 lb Gambian pouched rat Cricetomys qambianus and the 1 900 g 4 2 lb lesser cane rat Thryonomys gregorianus 5 63 65 The largest known rodent prey is the South African springhare Pedetes capensis at an average adult weight of 3 040 g 6 7 lb 48 63 Avery et al 1985 opined that springhares may be only taken as carrion as they claim it be too large for the eagle owl to overpower and indeed at least one South African springhare was fed on as roadkilled carrion However Avery et al 1985 also acknowledged that adult monkeys of larger size have verifiably been taken alive by the eagle owls so it certainly should not be ruled out that they also take live springhares 6 48 Many other mammals taken as prey by Verreaux s eagle owl are seemingly any encountered except the much larger species especially those that show a propensity for nocturnal or crepuscular activity This species has hunted bats in several cases from the 8 1 g 0 29 oz Lander s horseshoe bat Rhinolophus landeri the smallest known vertebrate prey species known for this eagle owl to Rousettus fruit bats that weigh over 150 g 5 3 oz 66 Most other mammalian prey recorded or inferred as hunted by Verreaux s eagle owl tend to be considerably larger Both the scrub hare Lepus saxatilis and the cape hare Lepus capensis have been reported as food the scrub species estimated to average 2 740 g 6 0 lb when taken 6 48 In parts of Kenya the scrub hare can be a particularly significant contributor of biomass to the eagle owl s diet 67 Other assorted mammalian prey species include the 540 g 1 2 lb golden rumped elephant shrew Rhynchocyon chrysopygus and the 3 800 g 8 4 lb cape hyrax Procavia capensis although it is possible that juvenile hyraxes are rather more commonly taken than adults 68 69 70 So far as is known Verreaux s eagle owl is the only living owl that preys upon multiple species of primate although isolated incidents of predation normally on young primates has been reported in two to three other large tropical owls 4 33 48 71 Multiple cases of predation against galagos have been reported unsurprisingly as they represent all nocturnal primates in Africa although they are seldom identified to species 5 6 Known galago prey species have ranged from the 85 3 g 3 01 oz Thomas s bushbaby Galagoides thomasi to the 1 098 g 2 4 lb brown greater galago Otolemur crassicaudatus 5 72 Monkeys are also predated opportunistically Particularly often reported in foods of the Verreaux s eagle owl as primates go is the vervet monkey Chlorocebus pygerythrus 72 73 74 Incidents of successful predation have included vervets that were half grown which the eagle owl was able to fly off with despite being about as heavy as the eagle owl itself and an adult vervet of an estimated weight of 4 000 to 5 000 g 8 8 to 11 0 lb which an eagle owl took on the ground and subsequently dismembered 5 46 48 However considering the formidable gauntlet of predators that vervet monkeys face the Verreaux s eagle owl is one of its more minor predators and attacks on them may be considered incidental due in part to the monkey s primarily diurnal activities 75 76 77 78 Other monkey species believed to be occasionally vulnerable to attacks include the blue monkey Cercopithecus mitis which is similar in size to the vervet patas monkeys Erythrocebus patas and the young of the chacma baboon Papio ursinus Adult patas monkeys averaging some 8 633 g 19 0 lb can be even larger than vervet monkeys but whether they take prime adults of the species is questionable 72 79 80 81 There are a few verified cases of Verreaux s eagle owls feeding on ungulates however some authors such as Avery et al 1985 feel that these generally represent cases of scavenging on carrion The remains of an adult grysbok Raphicerus melanotis weighing an estimated 10 670 g 23 5 lb was opined with certainty to have been taken as carrion per this study 6 Steyn 1982 accepted that this species could take live prey weighing up to 10 000 g 22 0 lb on rare occasions however he stated in a case of an adult common duiker Sylvicapra grimmia being fed on by an eagle owl that the duiker was likely roadkill 48 Scavenging on carrion is generally a rare behaviour in owls and has been reported in only a few cases where large owls are exceptionally hungry 4 82 Live ungulates verified to have been hunted have included piglets of common warthogs Phacochoerus africanus which have an average birth weight of only 665 g 1 5 lb but grow to over 2 000 g 4 4 lb in just a couple weeks 48 82 83 Adult Kirk s dik diks Madoqua kirkii one of the smallest antelope species at an average of 4 590 g 10 1 lb have also been hunted by Verreaux s eagle owl 84 85 Among mammalian carnivores the bulk of predatory incidents have reportedly involved mongooses Common social species from savanna edge such as the 710 g 1 6 lb yellow mongoose Cynictis penicillata and the 725 g 1 6 lb meerkats Suricata suricatta have been attacked as well as larger shy forest dwellers such as the 2 500 g 5 5 lb Jackson s mongoose Bdeogale jacksoni 86 87 An adult Meller s mongoose Rhynchogale melleri weighing about 2 200 g 4 9 lb which was taken by a Verreaux s eagle owl on the wing represents the second heaviest known object successfully flown with this species after the aforementioned half grown vervet monkey 82 Other smallish carnivores known to fall prey to Verreaux s eagle owls include the 292 g 10 3 oz African striped weasel Poecilogale albinucha and its larger cousin the 817 g 1 8 lb striped polecat Ictonyx striatus which in one nest from the border of the Kalahari represented the sole prey species for a pair of eagle owls 6 88 89 90 In southern Africa both the cape genet Genetta tigrina averaging 1 732 g 3 8 lb and the 1 600 g 3 5 lb black footed cat Felis nigripes the smallest felid in Africa have been included amongst their prey 91 92 93 94 The Verreaux s eagle owl is thought to be a threat to even larger carnivores including the 4 150 g 9 1 lb bat eared fox Otocyon megalotis and the 10 000 g 22 0 lb aardwolf Proteles cristata although whether healthy adults of the latter are in danger is doubtful 95 96 97 98 99 A scientifically observed attack on an adult male African wildcat Felis silvestris cafra which can weigh more than about 4 500 g 9 9 lb was aborted after the eagle owl apparently deemed that the felid was too heavy to take flight with 100 However domesticated cats of any size may fall prey to Verreaux s eagle owl At Lake Baringo Country Club in Kenya this eagle owl has apparently taken to habitually hunting outdoor cats reportedly making the cats on the grounds highly skittish 101 Birds edit nbsp A South African study showed the black headed heron as the most important prey by biomass for Verreaux s eagle owls Verreaux s eagle owl takes a diverse range of birds as prey More than 50 avian prey species have been identified and they may locally exceed mammals in importance in the diet somewhat unusually for eagle owls 6 33 No one type of bird can be said to be predictably favored as prey and any avian species unfortunate enough to have a nighttime roost or nest that happens to be in an eagle owl s foraging path may fall victim to this species Many cases of predation involve nest robbery with nestlings or fledglings being taken although adult birds may be taken just as often especially for species with less conspicuous nests 5 6 48 In South Africa s De Hoop Nature Reserve it was found that birds were somewhat better represented by both number 43 3 of remains and biomass 57 84 of remains than mammals or any other prey group The species best represented in biomass in the prior study was the black headed heron Ardea melanocephala with several adults estimated to average 1 260 g 2 8 lb being found among the prey remains 6 Other fairly common largish herons are also known to fall prey at night to Verreaux s eagle owl including the 873 g 1 9 lb common egret Ardea alba the 1 443 g 3 2 lb grey heron Ardea cinerea and the 975 g 2 1 lb purple heron Ardea purpurea 15 101 102 Other medium sized water birds known to have been represented in this species diet include the 1 008 g 2 2 lb yellow billed duck Anas undulata the 983 g 2 2 lb African black duck Anas sparsa the 596 g 1 3 lb African swamphen Porphyrio madagascariensis and the 825 g 1 8 lb red knobbed coot Fulica cristata 5 6 103 Besides herons another well represented group of birds in the diet are galliforms Perhaps the most widely preyed species reported from this group is the 1 229 g 2 7 lb helmeted guineafowl Numida meleagris which may seasonally dominate the eagle owl s food in Kenya 48 67 More modestly sized wild galliform species reported in the diet including the 96 g 3 4 oz common quail Coturnix coturnix and the 390 g 14 oz grey winged francolin Francolinus africanus 6 15 Domestic fowl especially those allowed back to a semi feral state and thus sleeping in the open as is prevalent in Africa are taken when encountered including chickens and peafowls 48 104 Various upland birds recorded as prey include the 177 g 6 2 oz Namaqua sandgrouse Pterocles namaqua the 350 g 12 oz rock pigeon Columba livia the 84 g 3 0 oz laughing dove Streptopelia senegalensis the 169 g 6 0 oz Senegal coucal Centropus senegalensis the 49 g 1 7 oz scaly throated honeyguide Indicator variegatus and several species of hornbill ranging in size from the 139 g 4 9 oz northern red billed hornbill Tockus erythrorhynchus to the 1 235 g 2 7 lb silvery cheeked hornbill Bycanistes brevis 6 15 37 82 105 106 Among passerines the most frequently taken are likely to be corvids which are often favored by Bubo owls from around the world due to their large size relatively open nests and frequently easy to find communal nocturnal roosts To date the cape crow Corvus capensis and pied crow Corvus albus are the corvids reported in dietary studies In Ethiopia thick billed ravens Corvus crassirostris which at 1 500 g 3 3 lb are possibly the heaviest corvid species in the world mobbed them vigorously and seemed to consider them a primary threat 5 6 107 Smaller passerines are by no means ignored 108 109 White eyes are among the more frequently taken smaller passerines with the 10 9 g 0 38 oz southern yellow white eye Zosterops anderssoni being the smallest identified avian prey species although penduline tits Anthoscopus ssp are likely to be even smaller 5 6 48 110 The largest bird to be hunted by Verreaux s eagle owl is complicated by the fact that they often take relatively small nestlings of larger species such as ostriches Struthio camelus and grey crowned cranes Balearica regulorum 48 The only avian prey items successfully attacked larger than other types of birds of prey reviewed later are likely bustards 4 6 48 Most predation records have reported on relatively small bustards namely northern Afrotis afraoides and southern black korhaans Afrotis afra which average only 745 g 1 6 lb and 690 g 1 5 lb respectively 48 111 Larger species of bustard thought to be threatened by Verreaux s eagle owl are the 4 790 g 10 6 lb Denham s bustard Neotis denhami and the 8 430 g 18 6 lb kori bustard Ardeotis kori although it is not clear whether adults especially males are attacked in the latter species 48 111 112 Other prey edit nbsp A Verreaux s eagle owl near a flying moth which can be as likely prey as a much larger itemReptiles and amphibians are occasional prey for Verreaux s eagle owls Various snakes have been included in their diet ranging from the small innocuous brown house snake Boaedon fuliginosus at 31 g 1 1 oz to large and venomous Egyptian cobras Naja haje weighing over 454 g 1 0 lb 5 6 113 Frogs were amongst the prominent prey recorded for suburban breeding eagle owls in South Africa namely the African red toad Schismaderma carens and the guttural toad Amietophrynus gutturalis Unidentified frogs were fairly significant in the diet from Kenya 5 104 114 The largest herpetological prey known is the Nile monitor Varanus niloticus at a mean mature mass of 5 850 g 12 9 lb these primarily diurnal reptiles can provide a fulfilling meal but can be hard to subdue even if ambushed unaware 48 82 115 116 Predation on fish has been reported but no fish have been observed firsthand in dietary studies 48 A surprisingly wide range of invertebrates have been reported in the diet for this species In some cases they may prey on insects as small as termites and even smaller invertebrates have been recorded in pellets such as oribatid mites and Sarcophaga flies but are likely consumed incidentally while eating a larger item either from carrion or the stomach of the prey itself 6 117 Unidentified scorpions spiders and millipedes have also been reported in their foods 5 48 Most attacks on insects involve large ground beetles or dung beetles Verreaux s eagle owl has been known to feed on dung beetles among herds of African buffalo Syncerus caffer by night boldly diving below the massive bovids legs and will readily feed on beetles among elephant dung when available 6 118 119 Interspecies predatory relations edit Sub Saharan Africa has many species of owl although there is less species diversity than in some areas of similar latitude in the neotropics and south Asia 4 12 It also hosts the most species of eagle owl with approximately eight typical Bubo species and all three fishing owl species as well 4 48 Due to the diversity here there are a number of distinctions between habitat preference primary prey types and body size among the eagle owls of Africa 52 82 The three smallest species of this genus reside solely in Africa the akun eagle owl Ketupa leucosticta the greyish eagle owl Bubo cinerascens and the spotted eagle owl Bubo africanus in rough order of increasing size These species are all primarily insectivores and are much reduced in the size and strength of their feet and talons compared to most other contemporary species although the spotted eagle owl can be locally specialized to feed on small rodents as well 4 12 27 120 While the akun is a primary forest dweller as are the medium sized Fraser s and Usambara eagle owl and large Shelley s eagle owl and thus is not likely to co exist with Verreaux s eagle owls except in rare cases the northerly distributed greyish eagle owl which was at one point considered merely a subspecies of the spotted and the southerly distributed spotted eagle owl have much more similar habitat preferences to the Verreaux s species 4 48 121 122 Of the non piscivorous owls in Africa the Cape eagle owl can have a somewhat broad diet and a capability to take large prey but is more specialized to feed on a narrow range of mammals mole rats often supplemented with rock hyrax than the Verreaux s eagle owl 48 82 123 The Cape eagle owl has a fairly strong preference for nesting and hunting within the confines of rocky and mountainous habitats whereas the Verreaux s is at best sporadic in such areas 5 124 125 126 In east Africa and South Africa habitat degradation has allowed the more adaptable Verreaux s eagle owl to move into areas inhabited by cape eagle owls and has presented the possible issue of the Verreaux s competitively excluding the smaller species 124 127 nbsp Other owls such as African grass owls may fall victim to predation by Verreaux s eagle owls Outside of the genus Bubo other owls in Africa are much smaller than Verreaux s eagle owls and are more likely to be viewed as prey than competition Among the small to mid sized owls that have fallen prey to this species are the barn owl Tyto alba and the African grass owl Tyto capensis both of which average around 419 g 14 8 oz in body mass in Africa the 334 g 11 8 oz marsh owl Asio capensis and the 216 g 7 6 oz southern white faced owl Ptilopsis granti 5 15 33 48 101 The only verified interactions with other typical eagle owls have been predatory as the 645 g 1 4 lb spotted eagle owl has been recorded among their prey in a few cases 5 48 There are several owls with broadly similar habitat preferences from African scops owls Otus senegalensis to African wood owls Strix woodfordii that have not been reported as food but are almost certainly occasionally threatened by Verreaux s eagle owls 48 82 As is commonly the case with eagle owls the Verreaux s eagle owl is perhaps the most serious predatory threat to diurnal raptors in its range most often ambushing raptors on their prominent nests upon nightfall and freely killing birds of prey of any age from nestlings to adults Such prey is not quantitatively significant as a food source but since raptors as a rule are sparsely distributed the habitual visitation of a single or pair of Verreaux s eagle owl can potentially be devastating to a local population 6 33 48 Among the species of small to medium sized raptors known to be attacked are the 638 g 1 4 lb African harrier hawk Polyboroides typus the 675 g 1 5 lb pale chanting goshawk Melierax canorus the 507 g 1 1 lb African marsh harrier Circus ranivorus the 110 g 3 9 oz scissor tailed kite Chelictinia riocourii the 291 5 g 0 6 lb African goshawk Accipiter tachiro the 875 g 1 9 lb common buzzard Buteo buteo and the 640 g 1 4 lb Wahlberg s eagle Hieraaetus wahlbergi 5 6 48 82 128 There are reports of Verreaux s eagle owls attacking even larger raptorial birds A case of the Verreaux s eagle owl killing an adult Pel s fishing owl in Botswana was verified At roughly 2 000 g 4 4 lb in body mass the fishing owl is of nearly the same size as the eagle owl 129 Cases where they ve attacked the nests of particularly large diurnal birds of prey have sometimes involved only nestlings being victimized such as attacks on the hooded vulture Necrosyrtes monachus and the bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus none of the adults which are about the same average adult body mass as the Verreaux s eagle owls have been reported as prey 48 130 However in some even larger birds of prey adults as well as nestlings and fledglings have been killed Successful nighttime attacks have been reported on adults of the 2 810 g 6 2 lb African fish eagle Haliaeetus vocifer and the 4 017 g 8 9 lb secretarybird Sagittarius serpentarius 48 In the Matobo Hills of Zimbabwe the Verreaux s eagle owl has been considered as one of the inferred predators of 4 195 g 9 2 lb Verreaux s eagle Aquila verreauxii although whether adults or only nestlings are vulnerable is not definitely clear 131 132 Other than these rare cases larger birds of prey such as eagles are not usually harassed by Verreaux s eagle owl and are more aptly viewed as competitors In fact the martial eagle Polemaetus bellicosus is sometimes regarded as the diurnal ecological equivalent of the Verreaux s eagle owl 103 The martial eagle has rather similar habitat preferences to the eagle owl and has a similarly broad opportunistic diet 48 133 134 At roughly 4 200 g 9 3 lb in average body mass the martial eagle is roughly twice as heavy as Verreaux s eagle owl and takes correspondingly large prey its average prey weight range being 1 000 to 5 000 g 2 2 to 11 0 lb and the eagles are capable of exceptionally taking prey up to nearly nine times their own weight whereas most of the eagle owls prey does not exceed 1 000 to 1 500 g 2 2 to 3 3 lb Verreaux s eagle owl is likely to give martial eagles a respectful space during daytime and there are no records of the two species harassing one another 6 15 48 135 Another particularly large and aggressive eagle the crowned eagle Stephanoaetus coronatus is largely a forest dweller and so is less directly a diurnal equivalent There is a single recorded instance of an immature crowned eagle being aggressively displaced at night by an adult Verreaux s eagle owl when it happened to encroach on the eagle owl s territory but without bloodshed and eagle owls would do well to avoid the exceptionally powerful eagle 48 135 136 Taken together the Verreaux s the Shelley s and the Cape eagle owls could be seen as nocturnally replacing the eagle species of martial crowned and Verreaux s eagles in the respective habitats of savanna forest and rocky areas but their increasingly diminishing size in comparison to the diurnal eagles means that generally speaking less large bodied prey is likely to be attacked 48 82 135 137 Despite its place near the top of the nocturnal avian food chain in 2013 a remote wildlife camera videotaped a black backed jackal Canis mesomelas attacking and killing a Verreaux s eagle owl at a watering hole 138 Similar rare successful attacks on great horned owls and Eurasian eagle owls by smaller red foxes Vulpes vulpes have been reported but in these cases the horned owl was mysteriously grounded and the eagle owl was nesting in too easily accessed sea cliffs More often foxes are prey rather than predators for northern Bubo owls 139 140 141 142 143 Given that the Verreaux s eagle owl is surprisingly bold about coming to their ground to among other things capture beetles feed on prey too large to carry in flight or as is likely the case in the jackal attack drink water it is possible that the jackal was simply able to ambush an incautious eagle owl rather than a grounded one 48 138 Perhaps even more unexpectedly an adult bateleur was filmed killing a Verreaux s eagle owl by day though whether this was predation or a competitive or anti predatory attack is unclear 144 Breeding edit nbsp A Verreaux s eagle owl is disturbed during the day adult birds frequently defend their territory and nest at any time of the day or year In the heart of their distribution i e east Africa breeding activity in this species can peak any time from February to September but can occur nearly any month at the species level 4 145 The timing of breeding is said to be correspondent roughly to the regional dry season so averages earlier in the northern part of the range before February and later July to September in the southern part of the range such as Kenya and South Africa 5 37 48 In the northern part of the range breeding season commenced in November in Mali in November and December in Senegal December in Equatorial Guinea and January in Nigeria 37 146 The monogamous pair is quite stable most likely mating for life As in most owls a courtship display is both to establish mates for a newly mature pair of eagle owls or to strength pair bonds prior to nesting 4 8 82 Vocalizations during courtship displays consist of relatively rapid and excited calling hooting and whining The pair during courtship will bow to one another flick open their wings and preen each other s feathers with the male taking the more active part in the courtship ritual 4 8 Like all raptorial birds Verreaux s eagle owls are strongly territorial 48 The pair will defend their territory by their song and sometimes though rarely through duets The territories of Verreaux s eagle owls can range up to 7 000 hectares in size although average territory sizes are seemingly unknown 4 8 48 Like great horned owls but unlike Eurasian eagle owls the Verreaux s eagle owls normally uses old nests built by other birds as their own nests Usage of a nest site other than those constructed by other birds is considered rarer even than in the horned owl and is viewed as almost exceptional in some parts of this species range 4 5 37 Existent reports of this species building its own nest are certain to be dubious as no known living owl builds a nest and only a small handful of owl species have been verified adding a small amount of nesting material to an existing surface or nest 4 5 They variety of bird nests they use is extreme Large stick nests in sturdy trees are generally used 4 In southern Africa recorded nest heights have ranged from 6 to 25 m 19 ft 8 in to 82 ft 0 in off the ground 48 Like other Bubo owls the large nest of large bodied accipitrids are often popular for use due to the often huge size and sturdiness of construction typical in this family with the nest builders devoting up to four months to their construction 147 However perhaps the constructor of nests that most often host Verreaux s eagle owls are hamerkops Scopus umbretta In everywhere from Mali to South Africa the eagle owl has been recorded using old nests built by this species 37 48 The unusual massive nest is an enclosed circle of sticks with a side entrance that are often very large relative to the size of the hamerkop a smallish compact wading bird Usually the eagle owls nest on the flat top of the hamerkop nest rather than the interior which is usually too small for the eagle owls to enter and this can provide a rather safe structure for the eagle owl family to call home 37 48 Other nest builders which are popular as hosts are vultures eagles at least eight species have built nests used by these eagle owls secretarybirds crows and even much smaller birds such as weavers which build huge communal nest structures which the eagle owls then similarly nest on top of 4 5 37 48 148 Most nests are already abandoned when the Verreaux s eagle owl take over it in large accipitrids for example many build alternate nests which are not used for years on end 48 However if the nest is occupied the Verreaux s eagle owl pair readily displaces the occupants and sometimes feeds on the birds in them 48 Species known to be successfully displaced from their nests have ranged up in size to lappet faced vultures Torgos tracheliotos which are more than three times heavier on average than the Verreaux s eagle owl 48 In some cases hamerkops have been known to try to defend their nest from the eagle owls but are usually chased away 5 Verreaux s eagle owls have been known to displace other opportunistic nest usurpers such as other owls and falcons in order to take over nest structures for themselves 5 37 149 In one case a pair of eagle owls nested on top of a hamerkop nest while the interior of the nest was occupied by Egyptian geese Alopochen aegyptiacus an unusual aggressive species of waterfowl that uses nests built by other species 48 In rare cases Verreaux s eagle owls have been recorded using large old hollows the stem of a palm tree or on a very dense tangle of creepers or orchids instead of birds nests as a nesting site 4 48 110 On average the female lays two white eggs which typically measure 62 6 mm 51 4 mm 2 46 in 2 02 in with a range in height of 58 to 66 mm 2 3 to 2 6 in and a range in width of 48 to 54 mm 1 9 to 2 1 in 4 48 150 The eggs weigh from 93 to 101 6 g 3 28 to 3 58 oz the upper weight being the mean mass of the first egg and the lower weight being the mean mass of the second egg 4 12 The eggs are reportedly laid at up to 7 day intervals and may take up nearly seven days as well between hatching 4 Most nest reportedly contain two eggs but some may contain only one and no more than two has been recorded in this species 4 48 151 The adult female incubates the eggs for 33 to 39 days the incubation stage being slightly longer than those of most other eagle owls at least the more northern species 4 37 On average at hatching the young weigh about 60 to 70 g 2 1 to 2 5 oz 4 The weight of the nestling can triple within five days after hatching 37 Due to the extreme interval between the hatching of the first and the second egg the older owlet is always considerably larger than the second As is widely reported in different kinds of raptorial birds the smaller chick usually dies in the nest 152 This may be due to starvation upon being outcompeted for food by the older chick or the smaller chick may be being attacked and killed by its older sibling Usually the smaller chick is gone within two weeks after hatching in this species 4 48 128 In rare cases both chicks are reared and survive to leave the nest although there are no known cases of two fledglings resulting from a Verreaux s eagle owl nest in southern Africa 37 48 The young are covered in off white down from hatching on and the pink eyelids may become apparent within the first week of life 4 37 By three weeks of age the chicks down will thicken and darken to a greyish colour with some barring present 48 By six weeks the young eagle owl will start to somewhat resemble an adult replete with the blackish brackets on the facial disc of the adult but still being fairly downy particularly about the head Only a week later almost all the down is likely to be moulted 37 48 The mother Verreaux s eagle owl remains on the nest for nearly the entire incubation period while the male hunts for food for both of them During the brooding stage which lasts about 20 days after hatching the female is still fed by the male but resumes hunting thereafter 4 During the incubation and brooding stage the male usually roosts near the nest during the day while the female continually sits about the nest 48 After the brooding stage the female normally takes to a perch within a dozen or so metres of the nest 37 Both parents may use a favor perch near the nest at which they dismantle prey into pieces that can be more easily consumed by their young these may be called plucking perches where birds are more commonly eaten or peeling perches where hedgehogs are the most regular prey Most dietary studies for the species have been from researching the pellets and skins under such perches 48 128 The female is an extremely tight sitter both while incubating and brooding and may not even be displaced from the nest even if shouted at or the tree is struck 5 48 When intruders approach too closely including other eagle owls potential predators and humans the most common response of the parent Verreaux s eagle owl is to grunt lowly often raising its ear tufts and bill clapping 4 5 Both sexes may engage in distraction displays when the area near the nest is encroached but it usually the male and most displays occur during nighttime but are possible at any time of day or night During such displays the adult will fly lover the ground with drooping wings or alights and drags its wings and flaps about often while bill clacking and calling 5 48 Similar injury feigning distraction displays have been recorded in the Eurasian eagle owl and smaller owl species but are not known in most other Bubo species 33 153 In one case feral dogs were successfully lured away from a young Verreaux s eagle owl by its parents distraction display after the young bird had fallen to the ground 48 In rare cases the parent eagle owls will attack interlopers In one such case a person who picked up a young eagle owl on the ground was severely injured after both parents attacked him 4 48 nbsp A Verreaux s eagle owl fledgling such as this one often leaves the nest well before it can fly competently On average the young Verreaux s eagle owl leaves the nest at around 62 63 days but cannot fly at this point It may take roughly anywhere from another two weeks to a month after this before the fledgling is a competent flier 4 48 After leaving the nest the fledgling is remarkably inactive making a minimum of effort to fly and usually selecting a roost within a few feet of the nest which it has awkwardly climbed to or will drop to a large bush below the nest 4 48 In the nest the chick will beg for food with a shrill or chittering noise sometimes bobbing its head or swaying about and transferring its weight between its feet sometimes called a hunger dance and it continues to rely on its parents for food well after leaving the nest 5 48 Sometimes after leaving the nest the young eagle owls are mobbed as are adults by other birds of prey and crows during the day which is often heatedly directed at this species as adult eagle owls regularly kill these birds at night The young eagle owl may dodge to denser branches to avoid being wounded during such attacks 5 Young Verreaux s eagle owls may fall to the ground often as a result of mobbing If the young bird is discovered on the ground it may feign death lying prone with its head lax and its eyes closed Even if picked up while death shamming the young eagle owl may remain moribund Upon being left without disturbance after playing dead the young Verreaux s eagle owl will gradually open its eyes and return to a normal state 48 It is not until they are about 5 months old do most young Verreaux s eagle owl show the ability to capture prey for themselves However the stage at which the young of this species becomes independent appears remarkably variable One ringed 9 month old moved 24 km 15 mi away from its nest area and was thus seemingly fully independent 4 On the other hand Verreaux s eagle owls of over half a year in age who presumably can fly and hunt on their own have been seen to linger and continue to beg its parents to be fed into the next breeding season and may even be fed by their father while he is also feeding the mother and a new nestling 48 In Kenya when a biologist fed a wild juvenile eagle owl mole rats and chicken heads in its nest area the young eagle owl apparently became remarkably confiding towards the person 46 The tendency of young eagle owls to linger into the next breeding season sometimes results in family groups roosting together a very unusual occurrence for an eagle owl species One such group consisted of five birds together including two parents and three owls from the preceding past three years and apparently the younger eagle owls even helped bring food for the chick once the egg hatched 8 46 48 On average sexual maturity in Verreaux s eagle owls appears to be attained at three to four years of age 4 In most cases a pair of Verreaux s eagle owl is able to nest annually however in some cases they may nest only every two to three years in probable situations of extreme food shortages 4 48 Annual mortality appears to be fairly low in this large owl species Few species have been reported to hunt Verreaux s eagle owls short of the aforementioned jackal attack even nests have rarely been seen to be predated although they may on rare occasions run foul of some predators such as larger felids with the ability to climb 46 48 That young birds usually leave the nest before they can fly would appear to endanger them but the threat and distraction display of parent eagle owls are apparently often successful 48 Adult eagle owls can appear nearly fearless as they have been reported to stand their ground and engage in threat displays when encountered on or near the ground against much larger animals such as rhinoceroses and lions and in such cases are apparently not approached further by the bigger animals although the eagle owls could easily be killed by such animals if contact was made 5 46 The lifespan in the wild is not known however in captivity the species can live for over 15 years and possibly up to 30 years in some cases 4 Status edit nbsp An artist s rendering of a Verreaux s eagle owl from 1838Verreaux s eagle owl is a seldom encountered species occurring at low densities and needing large territories for hunting and breeding purposes The threats faced by this species are sadly typical of many large birds of prey from around the world Not infrequently they are locally rare due to persecution 8 11 The normal cause of persecution is their possible status as predators of small domestic stock though this is certain to be rare at least in areas with substantial wild prey populations 8 154 An additional threat is the residual effects of pesticides as poison usually through rodenticide or poisoned carcasses left out for scavengers such as jackals consumed through prey may badly affect them 4 155 They may be killed by flying into novel man made objects including wires and massive dams along reservoirs 156 157 158 Habitat destruction can also affect them as they require ample trees with large bird nests in order to take residence in a given area 8 159 In some areas however they ve been shown to be able to nest in peri urban or suburban areas showing greater adaptability to human based land changes than many other large birds of prey 104 128 In Eswatini the species is considered Near Threatened and the species has been recommended for threatened status in southern Africa overall 160 161 162 In west Africa and central Africa the habitat is often marginal for this species the distribution is sporadic and thus this eagle owl is only encountered either uncommonly or rarely 1 37 82 The greatest regional stronghold for Verreaux s eagle owls is seemingly east Africa in countries such as Kenya which may have numbers comparable to pre colonial times 5 82 At the species level they are widespread and currently not considered to be threatened with extinction 1 4 References edit a b c d e f g h BirdLife International 2016 Bubo lacteus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22688986A93212982 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22688986A93212982 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 2022 01 14 a b c d Giant Eagle Owl Archived 2012 03 01 at the Wayback Machine Arkive a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk Konig C amp Weick F 2008 Owls of the World A amp C Black ISBN 9780300142273 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao Brown L H 1965 Observations on Verreaux s Eagle Owl Bubo lacteus Temminck in Kenya Journal of the East African Natural History Society 25 101 107 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Avery G Robertson A S Palmer N G amp Prins A J 1985 Prey of giant eagle owls in the de Hoop nature reserve Cape province and some observations on hunting strategy Ostrich 56 1 3 117 122 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael 2003 Whose Bird Men and Women Commemorated in the Common Names of Birds London Christopher Helm pp 350 351 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Hume R 1991 Owls of the world Running Press Philadelphia 1991 Andersson C J 1872 Notes on the birds of Damara Land and the adjacent countries of South West Africa J van Voorst Olsen Jery Wink Michael Sauer Gurth Heidi amp Trost Susan 2002 A new Ninox owl from Sumba Indonesia Emu 102 3 223 231 a b c Penhallurick J M 2002 The taxonomy and conservation status of the owls of the world a review Ecology and conservation of Owls CSIRO Publishing Australia 343 354 a b c d e f g h i Owls of the World A Photographic Guide by Mikkola H Firefly Books 2012 ISBN 9781770851368 Brodkorb P amp Mourer Chauvire C 1984 Fossil owls from early man sites of Olduvai Gorge Tanzania Ostrich 55 1 17 27 Pavia M Manegold A amp Haarhoff P 2014 New early Pliocene owls from Langebaanweg South Africa with first evidence of Athene south of the Sahara and a new species of Tyto Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 60 4 815 828 a b c d e f g h CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses 2nd Edition by John B Dunning Jr Editor CRC Press 2008 ISBN 978 1 4200 6444 5 Tana P G Vazquez A amp Chavez C 1997 Notes on a nest of the Tawny Fish Owl Ketupa flavipes at Sakatang Stream Taiwan Wilson Bulletin 66 135 136 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Northern Hemisphere The MIT Press 0262220350 Benson C W 1948 Geographical voice variation in African birds Ibis 90 1 48 71 Kelso L 1940 Variation of the external ear opening in the Strigidae The Wilson Bulletin 24 29 Buxton P A 1935 Notes on birds from northern Nigeria Ibis 77 1 101 110 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Wilson R T amp Wilson M P 1981 Notes on the Giant Eagle Owl Bubo lacteus in central Mali Ardea 69 205 208 Layard E L 1884 The birds of South Africa Bernard Quaritch Lynesc A H 1925 XV On the Birds of North arid Central Darfur with Notes on the West Central Kordofan and North Nuba Provinces of British Sudan Part IV Ibis 67 2 344 416 Wilhelmi F K amp Kaariye H Y Bird observation in the Ogaden Region Somali Regional State Ethiopia A Contribution to the Identification of Important Bird Areas South Africa Bird Atlas Project 2 January 2010 Seavy N E 2004 Calling activity in Kibale National Park Uganda Journal of Raptor Res 38 3 208 213 Bowdler Sharpe R 1892 XLV On the Birds collected by Mr FJ Jackson FZS during his recent Expedition to Uganda through the Territory of the Imperial British East African Company Ibis 34 4 534 555 Herholdt J J 1993 Status of the Giant Eagle Owl Bubo lacteus in the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park South Africa Gabar 8 17 20 Maclean G L 1969 The breeding seasons of birds in the south western Kalahari Ostrich 40 S1 179 192 a b c d e f g h i Pitman C amp Adamson J 1978 Notes on the ecology and ethology of the giant eagle owl Bubo lacteus Honeyguide 95 26 43 Griesser M amp Suzuki T N 2016 Occasional cooperative breeding in birds and the robustness of comparative analyses concerning the evolution of cooperative breeding Zoological Letters 2 1 7 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu Steyn P 1983 Birds of prey of southern Africa Their identification and life histories Croom Helm Beckenham UK 1983 Errington P L 1932 Studies on the Behavior of the Great Horned Owl Wilson Bulletin 12 212 220 Marti C D 1974 Feeding ecology of four sympatric owls Condor 45 61 Adamcik R S A W Todd and L B Keith 1978 Demographic and dietary responses of Great Horned Owls during a snowshoe hare cycle Canadian Field Naturalist 92 156 166 a b Andrews Peter 1990 Owls Caves and Fossils Predation Preservation and Accumulation of Small Mammal Bones in Caves with an Analysis of the Pleistocene Cave Faunas from Westbury sub Mendip Somerset UK University of Chicago Press 231 pg Curry Lindahl K Photographic Studies of Some Less Familiar Birds LXXXIV Eagle Owl British Birds L 486 490 Kingdon J Happold D Butynski T Hoffmann M Happold M amp Kalina J 2013 Mammals of Africa Volume IV Hedgehogs Shrews and Bats A amp C Black Hallam S L 2011 Heterothermy and seasonal patterns of metabolic rate in the southern African hedgehog Atelerix frontalis Doctoral dissertation MSc thesis Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University Port Elizabeth Santana E M Jantz H E amp Best T L 2010 Atelerix albiventris Erinaceomorpha Erinaceidae Mammalian Species 42 1 99 110 Reeve N 1994 Hedgehogs London T amp AD Poyser Wassink G 2010 Het dieet van de Oehoe in Nederland en enkele aangrenzende gebieden in Duitsland Limosa 83 97 108 Marti C D Korpimaki E amp Jaksic F M 1993 Trophic structure of raptor communities a three continent comparison and synthesis In Current Ornithology pp 47 137 Springer US Craighead J J and F C Craighead Jr 1956 Hawks owls and wildlife Stackpole Co Harrisburg Pennsylvania Bennett N C amp Jarvis J U 1988 The social structure and reproductive biology of colonies of the mole rat Cryptomys damarensis Rodentia Bathyergidae Journal of Mammalogy 69 2 293 302 Avery D M 1985 The dispersal of brown rats Rattus norvegicus and new specimens from 19th century Cape Town Mammalia 49 4 573 576 a b c Happold D C amp Kingdon J Eds 2013 Mammals of Africa Volume 3 Rodents hares and rabbits Bloomsbury Dave Taylor s African Safari Trophic Level IV Large Carnivores Verreaux s Eagle Owl Page 2 sensesofwildness com Brain C K 1983 The hunters or the hunted an introduction to African cave taphonomy University of Chicago Press Mikula P amp Hromada M 2015 Short Communication True bats Microchiroptera in the diet of Verreaux s Eagle Owl Bubo lacteus Scopus 35 1 50 51 a b Short L L amp Horne J F 2006 The Avifauna of an Upland Seasonal Woodland in Central Kenya Ecology Behavior Breeding No 53 Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig Rathbun G B 1979 Rhynchocyon chrysopygus VII Interspecific Ecology Advances in Ethology 49 51 54 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 1979 tb00150 x Badenhorst S van Niekerk K L amp Henshilwood C S 2014 Rock Hyraxes Procavia capensis from Middle Stone Age Levels at Blombos Cave South Africa African Archaeological Review 31 1 25 43 Olds M amp Soshani J 1982 Procavia capensis Mammalian Species 171 1 7 Hart D 2007 Predation on primates a biogeographical analysis In Primate anti predator strategies pp 27 59 Springer US a b c T M Butynski J Kingdon J Kalina eds 2013 Mammals of Africa Volume II Primates Bloomsbury Publishing London United Kingdom 556 pp ISBN 978 1 4081 2252 5 print Seyfarth R amp Cheney D 1990 The assessment by vervet monkeys of their own and another species alarm calls Animal Behaviour 40 4 754 764 Struhsaker T T 1967 Ecology of vervet monkeys Cercopithecus aethiops in the Masai Amboseli game reserve Kenya Ecology 892 904 Seyfarth R M Cheney D L amp Marler P 1980 Vervet monkey alarm calls semantic communication in a free ranging primate Animal Behaviour 28 4 1070 1094 Pasternak G M 2011 Environmental effects on group structure and vigilance in vervet monkeys Doctoral dissertation Lethbridge Alta University of Lethbridge Dept of Psychology c2011 Josephs N 2015 Social and spatial structure of vervet monkey troops Doctoral dissertation Lethbridge Alta University of Lethbridge Dept of Psychology Ducheminsky N Henzi S P amp Barrett L 2014 Responses of vervet monkeys in large troops to terrestrial and aerial predator alarm calls Behavioral Ecology 25 6 1474 1484 Coleman B 2013 Spatial and temporal determinants of samango monkey Cercopithecus mitis erythrarchus resource acquisition and predation avoidance behaviour Doctoral dissertation Durham University Comparison of play behaviour of four guenon species Diana monkey Cercopithecus diana de Brazza monkey Cercopithecus neglectus Patas monkey Erythrocebus patas and Vervet Chlorocebus pygerythus with regard to self handicapping diploma thesis in English 57 pp Faculty of Natural Sciences University of South Bohemia Ceske Budejovice Czech Republic MacLean G 1969 Proceedings of the Third Pan African Ornithological Congress held at Pretoriuskop Kruger National Park pp 182 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Steyn P 2010 A delight of owls African owls observed Jacana Media Common Warthog Phacochoerus africanus Fact Sheet 2015 c2015 San Diego CA San Diego Zoo Global accessed 2016 http ielc libguides com sdzg factsheets warthog com Kingswood S C amp Kumamoto A T 1997 Madoqua kirkii Mammalian Species Archive 569 1 10 Madoqua Volume 19 Issue 2 South west Africa Nature Conservation and Tourism of the South West Africa Administration 1997 Cornell University J Kingdon M Hoffmann eds 2013 Mammals of Africa Volume V Carnivores Pangolins Equids and Rhinoceroses Bloomsbury Publishing London United Kingdom 544 pp ISBN 978 1 4081 2255 6 Taylor P J amp Meester J 1993 Cynictis penicillata Mammal Species 432 1 7 Lariviere S 2001 Poecilogale albinucha Mammalian Species 681 1 1 4 Lariviere S 2002 Ictonyx striatus Mammalian Species 1 5 Rasa O A E 2007 Diet of a Verreaux s Eagle Owl in the Kalahari Gabar 18 1 Verreaux s eagle owl Cannudrum Retrieved 4 May 2016 Stuart C T 1981 Notes on the mammalian carnivores of the Cape Province South Africa Bontebok 1 1 58 Renard A Lavoie M Pitt J A amp Lariviere S 2015 Felis nigripes Carnivora Felidae Mammalian Species 47 925 78 83 Olbricht G amp Sliwa A 1997 In situ and ex situ observations and management of Black footed cats Felis nigripes International Zoo Yearbook 35 1 81 89 Clark Jr H O 2005 Otocyon megalotis Mammalian Species 1 5 Bat eared fox Otocyon megalotis J A J Nel and B Maas Sillero Zubiri C Hoffmann M and Macdonald D W eds 2004 Canids Foxes Wolves Jackals and Dogs Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan IUCN SSC Canid Specialist Group Gland Switzerland and Cambridge UK x 430 pp Welch R J Periquet S Petelle M B amp le Roux A 2017 Hunter or hunted Perceptions of risk and reward in a small mesopredator Journal of Mammalogy 98 6 1531 1537 Sliwa A 1996 A functional analysis of scent marking and mating behaviour in the aardwolf Doctoral dissertation University of Pretoria Kingdon J 2015 The Kingdon field guide to African mammals Bloomsbury Publishing Sliwa Alexander Marna Herbst and M Mills Black footed cats Felis nigripes and African wild cats Felis silvestris a comparison of two small felids from South African arid lands Biology and conservation of wild felids DW Macdonald and AJ Loveridge eds Oxford University Press Oxford United Kingdom 2010 537 558 a b c Paul Helen Harris amp Kenya Birds Bubo lacteus Ecoport Retrieved 4 May 2016 Tomlinson D N S 1974 Studies of the Purple Heron Part 1 Heronry structure nesting habits and reproductive success Ostrich 45 3 175 181 a b Hancock P amp Weiersbye I 2015 Birds of Botswana Princeton University Press a b c Chittenden H 2014 Prey items of Verreaux s Eagle Owl Bubo lacteus breeding in suburbia Gabar 25 15 16 Kemp A C 1976 A study of the ecology behaviour and systematics of Tockus hornbills Aves Bucerotidae No 20 Transvaal Museum Moreau R E 1936 The breeding biology of certain East African hornbills Bucerotidae Jour East Africa and Uganda Nat Hist Soc 13 1 28 de Castro J J amp de Castro M 2014 Verreaux s Eagle Owl Bubo lacteus attacked by thick billed ravens Corvus crassirostris Scopus 32 1 51 52 Thiollay J M Natural predation on quelea Quelea quelea Africa s Bird Pest 1989 216 229 Raihani N J Nelson Flower M J Moyes K Browning L E amp Ridley A R 2010 Synchronous provisioning increases brood survival in cooperatively breeding pied babblers Journal of Animal Ecology 79 1 44 52 a b Bubo lacteus Verreaux s eagle owl Giant eagle owl Archived December 9 2011 at the Wayback Machine Biodiversityexplorer org Retrieved on 2012 08 24 a b Hockey PAR Dean WRJ and Ryan PG eds 2005 Roberts Birds of southern Africa VIIth ed The Trustees of the John Voelcker Bird Book Fund Cape Town Piersma T del Hoyo J Elliot A amp Sangatal J 1996 Handbook of the birds of the world Hoatzin to Auks Feldman A amp Meiri S 2013 Length mass allometry in snakes Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 108 1 161 172 Vawda A Burger F J amp Smit A L 1981 Glucose tolerance in the toad Bufo gutturalis Power South African Journal of Zoology 16 3 156 162 Condon K 1987 A kinematic analysis of mesokinesis in the Nile monitor Varanus niloticus Experimental biology 47 2 73 Bartlett R P Bartlett 1996 Monitors Tegus and Related Lizards Hauppauge New York Barron s Educational Series Inc Vernon C J 1980 Prey of six species of owl at the Zimbabwe Ruins 1970 1975 Honeyguide 101 26 28 Pretorius M amp Wolfaardt V 2014 Verreaux s Eagle Owl Bubo lacteus feeding on dung beetles Gabar 25 2 69 70 Friedmann H amp Stager K E 1967 Results of the 1966 Cheney expedition to the Samburu district Kenya Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History Benson C W 1962 The food of the Spotted Eagle owl Bubo africanus Ostrich 33 4 Mendelsohn J M 1989 Habitat preferences population size food and breeding of six owl species in the Springbok Flats South Africa Ostrich 60 4 183 190 Riegert J Sedlacek O amp Hutterer R 2008 Diet of sympatric African grass owl Tyto capensis and spotted eagle owl Bubo africanus in the Bamenda Highlands NW Cameroon African Journal of Ecology 46 3 428 431 Ogada D L amp Kibuthu P M 2009 Impacts of agriculture on the diet and productivity of Mackinder s Eagle Owls Bubo capensis mackinderi in Kenya Biotropica 41 4 485 492 a b Voous K H 1966 The distribution of owls in Africa in relation to general zoogeographical problems Ostrich 37 S1 499 506 Ogada D L amp Kibuthu P M 2012 Breeding ecology of Mackinder s Eagle Owls Bubo capensis mackinderi in farmlands of central Kenya Journal of Raptor Research 46 4 327 335 Jackson H D 1973 The Cape eagle owl Bubo capensis in Mozambique Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 93 10 Ogada D L amp Kibuthu P M 2008 Conserving Mackinder s eagle owls in farmlands of Kenya assessing the influence of pesticide use tourism and local knowledge of owl habits in protecting a culturally loathed species Environmental Conservation 35 03 252 260 a b c d Fry C H Keith S amp Urban E K 1988 The Birds of Africa Vol 3 Academic Press London Wright D amp Hancock P 2008 Pel s Fishing Owl Scotopelia peli falls prey to Verreaux s Eagle Owk Bubo lacteus in the Okavango Delta Gabar 19 2 73 74 Watson R T 1988 The influence of nestling predation on nest site selection and behaviour of the bateleur South African Journal of Zoology 23 3 143 149 Gargett V 1969 Black Eagle survey Rhodes Matopos National Park a population study 1964 1968 Ostrich 40 S1 397 414 Cottrell J A 1970 Black eagle fly free Cornell University Purnell Boshoff A F amp Palmer N G 1980 Macro analysis of prey remains from martial eagle nests in the Cape Province Ostrich 51 1 7 13 Boshoff A F Palmer N G amp Avery G 1990 Regional variation in the diet of martial eagles in the Cape Province South Africa S Afr J Wildl Res 20 57 68 a b c Ferguson Lees J amp Christie D A 2001 Raptors of the World Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Brown L H 1982 The prey of the crowned eagle Stephanoaetus coronatus in Central Kenya Scopus 6 91 94 Newton I 2010 Population ecology of raptors A amp C Black a b GRAPHIC Jackal Kills Giant Eagle Owl at Pete s Pond 7 11 2013 YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 19 Retrieved 2014 12 02 Mils C T A Great Horned Owl killed by a Red Fox Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources pp 158 Jaume S 2000 Depredaciones de Zorro Vulpes vulpes sobre Buho Real Bubo bubo en un area del litoral Iberico Ardeola 47 1 97 99 Jaksic F M amp Marti C D 1984 Comparative food habits of Bubo owls in Mediterranean type ecosystems Condor 288 296 Leditznig C Leditznig W amp Gossow H 2001 15 Jahre Untersuchungen am Uhu Bubo bubo im Mostviertel Niederosterreichs Stand und Entwicklungstendenzen Egretta 44 45 73 Storm G L Andrews R D Phillips R L Bishop R A Siniff D B amp Tester J R 1976 Morphology reproduction dispersal and mortality of midwestern red fox populations Wildlife Monographs 3 82 Bateleur kills a Giant Eagle Owl in Kruger National Park published by YouTube accessdate 2021 07 24 Verreaux s Eagle Owl Owls org 2012 08 19 Retrieved on 2012 08 24 Mackworth Praed C W amp Grant C H B 1970 Birds of West Central Africa Vol I Collias N E amp Collias E C 2014 Nest building and bird behavior Princeton University Press Oschadleus H D 2019 Raptors breeding on weaver nests in trees and on man made structures Ostrich 90 1 85 88 Tarboton W R amp Erasmus R 1998 Sasol Owls amp Owling in Southern Africa Struik Archer G and Goodman EM 1961 The birds of British Somaliland and the Gulf of Aden Vol III Oliver amp Boyd Edinburgh Moreau R E 1944 Clutch size a comparative study with special reference to African birds Ibis 86 3 286 347 Simmons R 1988 Offspring quality and the evolution of cainism Ibis 130 3 339 357 Witherby H F Jourdian F C R Ticehurst N F and Tucker B W 1943 The Handbook of British Birds Nature 140 199 200 Enriquez P A amp Mikkola H 1997 Comparative study of general public owl knowledge in Costa Rica Central America and Malawi Africa Herholdt J J 1998 Survival threats and conservation management of raptors in the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 53 2 201 218 Cooper J E 1973 Post mortem findings in East African birds of prey Journal of Wildlife Diseases 9 4 368 375 van Rooyen C amp Diamond M 2008 Wildlife Powerline Interaction Management Indwa 6 7 16 Anderson M D Maritz A W amp Oosthuysen E 1999 Raptors drowning in farm reservoirs in South Africa Ostrich 70 2 139 144 Herremans M 1998 Conservation status of birds in Botswana in relation to land use Biological Conservation 86 2 139 160 Monadjem A Boycott R C Parker V amp Culverwell J 2003 Threatened vertebrates of Swaziland Swaziland Red Data Book fishes amphibians reptiles birds and mammals Ministry of Tourism Environment and Communications Mbabane Swaziland Monadjem A amp Rasmussen M W 2008 Nest distribution and conservation status of eagles selected hawks and owls in Swaziland Gabar 18 1 22 Jenkins A R 2008 A proposed new list of the threatened raptors of southern Africa Gabar 19 1 27 40 Owls of the World by Konig Weick amp Becking Yale University Press 2009 ISBN 9780300142273External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bubo lacteus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Bubo lacteus Giant Eagle Owl Verreaux s Eagle Owl Species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds Verreaux s Eagle Owl videos photos amp sounds on the Internet Bird Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Verreaux 27s eagle owl amp oldid 1184151467, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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