Striped Owl

Striped Owl
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Strigiformes
Family: Strigidae
Genus: Pseudoscops (disputed)
Species: P. clamator
Binomial name
Pseudoscops clamator
(Vieillot, 1807)
Synonyms

Asio clamator
Rhinoptynx clamator
(but see text)

The Striped Owl is a medium-sized owl with large ear tufts and a brownish-white facial disk rimmed with black. Its beak is black, and it has cinnamon-colored eyes. It has shorter, rounder wings than most of its close relatives. The upperparts are cinnamon with fine black vermiculation and heavy stripes. The underparts are pale tawny with dusky streaks. It is 30–38 centimetres (12–15 in) and weighs from 320 to 546 g (11 to 19.3 oz).[1]

It uses a variety of habitats, including riparian woodlands, marshes, savannahs, grassy open areas, and tropical rainforests. It can be found from sea level to 1600 meters (5,250 ft.) and above.

It lives in South America, and parts of Central America.

Its systematic placement is not resolved. Different authorities place it either in Asio, in Pseudoscops together with the Jamaican Owl, or more rarely into the monotypic genus Rhinoptynx.

References

References

  1. ^ [1] (2011).

External links