Calliope Hummingbird, just for the record
Weaselhead birding
Calliope Hummingbird / Selasphorus calliope
Yellow Warbler nest
Elbow River, Weaselhead
Cliff Swallow nests
Mallard male / Anas platyrhynchos
Red Squirrel / Tamiasciurus hudsonicus
Cedar Waxwing / Bombycilla cedrorum
Woolly Gromwell
Penstemon
Hawthorn blossom / Crataegus
Seneca Snakeroot / Polygala senega
Yellow lady's-slipper / Cypripedium parviflorum
Lilac, growing wild
Non-native Columbine
Cicada
Wolf Willow
Cicada
Non-native Columbine
Yellow lady's-slipper / Cypripedium parviflorum
Bird house
Clay-coloured Sparrow bathing
Day 8, Oakworm moth / Anisota sp., Santa Ana Natio…
Day 8, stuffed Armadillo, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, Santa Ana Visitor's Centre, Texas
Day 8, tick in action on friend's arm, Santa Ana N…
Day 8, Blackbuck Antelope, imported from India for…
Day 8, Lark Sparrow, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, Broad-winged (?) Hawk, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, Spanish Moss, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, lizard, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, lizard, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, looking over Rio Grande to Mexico, Santa An…
Day 8, moth, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, lizard, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, moth by Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, lizard, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, lizard, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, lizard, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, lizard, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, the Old Cemetery, Santa Ana NWR
Location
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223 visits
Day 8, tiny Elf Owl / Micrathene whitneyi - smallest owl in the world!
Just added the final 23 images taken on DAY 8, 26 March 2019, at the Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge, South Texas. Too many problems with uploading today - usually, photos upload quickly and without issues for me. Sorry, so many blurry photos in this batch, but a lot of things were far away, or taken on a drive-by, or, in the case of this amazing little owl, taken in the evening just when it was getting/got dark and from a long way off. We had been told about this pair and after spending a few hours at the Santa Ana NWR, we made the drive to this special, undisclosed location. This was such a huge thrill, to see a pair of the smallest owls in the world, the Elf Owl. When we arrived, it was beginning to get dark. This owl was already in its cavity and then its mate flew to it, and then both owls flew off into the trees.
"The elf owl (Micrathene whitneyi) is a member of the owl family Strigidae, that breeds in the southwestern United States and Mexico. It is the world's lightest owl, although the long-whiskered owlet and the Tamaulipas pygmy owl are of a similarly diminutive length.[2] It is also the world's smallest owl.[3] The mean body weight of this species is 40 g (1.4 oz). These tiny owls are 12.5 to 14.5 cm (4.9 to 5.7 in) long and have a wingspan of about 27 cm (10.5 in).[4] Their primary projection (flight feather) extends nearly past their tail. They have fairly long legs and often appear bow-legged. They can often be heard calling to one another just after dusk or at sunset. Their call is a high-pitched whinny or chuckle. The male and female dart around trees and call back and forth.
Elf owls usually choose abandoned, north-facing woodpecker cavities in saguaro cacti, sycamores, cottonwoods, and other hardwood trees, to raise their young. During dusk and just before dawn are the times this owl is most active, however, hunting is performed mostly during nocturnal hours.
The Elf Owl migrates to the southwest United States; California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, in the spring and summer for breeding. In the winter, it is found in central and southern Mexico. Migrant elf owls return north in mid-April to early May. Resident populations occur in a couple of places in south central Mexico and along the Baja peninsula." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elf_owl
"The elf owl (Micrathene whitneyi) is a member of the owl family Strigidae, that breeds in the southwestern United States and Mexico. It is the world's lightest owl, although the long-whiskered owlet and the Tamaulipas pygmy owl are of a similarly diminutive length.[2] It is also the world's smallest owl.[3] The mean body weight of this species is 40 g (1.4 oz). These tiny owls are 12.5 to 14.5 cm (4.9 to 5.7 in) long and have a wingspan of about 27 cm (10.5 in).[4] Their primary projection (flight feather) extends nearly past their tail. They have fairly long legs and often appear bow-legged. They can often be heard calling to one another just after dusk or at sunset. Their call is a high-pitched whinny or chuckle. The male and female dart around trees and call back and forth.
Elf owls usually choose abandoned, north-facing woodpecker cavities in saguaro cacti, sycamores, cottonwoods, and other hardwood trees, to raise their young. During dusk and just before dawn are the times this owl is most active, however, hunting is performed mostly during nocturnal hours.
The Elf Owl migrates to the southwest United States; California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, in the spring and summer for breeding. In the winter, it is found in central and southern Mexico. Migrant elf owls return north in mid-April to early May. Resident populations occur in a couple of places in south central Mexico and along the Baja peninsula." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elf_owl
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