Southern Boobook

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wikipedia:How to read a taxobox
How to read a taxobox
Southern Boobook
A New Zealand Morepork or ruruNinox novaeseelandiae novaeseelandiae
A New Zealand Morepork or ruru
Ninox novaeseelandiae novaeseelandiae
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Strigiformes
Family: Strigidae
Genus: Ninox
Species: N. novaeseelandiae
Binomial name
Ninox novaeseelandiae
(Gmelin, 1788)

The Southern Boobook (Ninox novaeseelandiae), also called the mopoke or morepork, is a small brown owl found mainly in New Zealand and the more fertile and temperate parts of Australia. Further to the north it is less common but widespread, its range extending to most of northern, central and western Australia, Timor, southern New Guinea and nearby islands. It used to also inhabit Lord Howe Island but is now locally extinct there, and in Norfolk Island it is close to extinction. The name boobook comes from the Eora Australian Aboriginal tribe, who were the original inhabitants of the Sydney region.

The boobook which lives in Australia was originally thought to be the same species as the New Zealand morepork (ruru) but recent research has suggested this species is actually slightly larger than the New Zealand version.

The Morepork on Norfolk Island (Ninox novaeseelandiae undulata) is one of the subspecies of this bird. In 1987, its population was down to only one female named Miamiti. Before Miamiti died in 1996, she had several young with two New Zealand Morepork males which were introduced for this purpose. While the "pure" Norfolk Island lineage is now extinct, the hybrid population is slowly recovering and now well into the double figures[citation needed]. The subspecies is listed as endangered on the list of threatened fauna of Australia.

The Southern Boobook has almost 20 alternative common names, mostly regional; of them mopoke/morepork is the most well-recognised; others include, for example, boobook or Tasmanian spotted owl. In Māori it is called Ruru. Many of the common native names are onomatopoeic, the owl having a two-tone call giving rise to the names such as Boo-book, More-pork, Mo-poke and Ru-ru.

It occurs in most habitats with trees, ranging from deep tropical forests to isolated stands at the edges of arid zones, farmland, or alpine grasslands, but is most common in temperate woodland. Southern Boobooks are usually seen singly, in pairs, or in small family groups of an adult pair and up to three young. They are mainly nocturnal, but are sometimes active at dawn and dusk and, in New Zealand, even during the day. The main hunting times are evenings and mornings, with brief bursts of activity through the night. On dark nights they often perch through the middle hours and, particularly if the weather is bad, may hunt by daylight instead.

Although their main hunting technique is perch and pounce, they are agile birds with a swift, goshawk-like wing action and the ability to manoeuver rapidly when pursuing prey or hawking for insects. Almost any suitably sized prey is taken, particularly birds or small mammals and, in New Zealand, wetas.

The fictional city of Ankh-Morpork features the Boobook on its coat of arms.

[edit] References

[edit] External links