http://www.dvoc.org/OrnithStudy/Presentations/Presentations2012/Snowy%20Owl%20plumages.pdf
 

Th link above will take you to a presentation by Art McMorris of the Delaware 
Valley Ornithological Club (DVOC) on the difficulty of aging and sexing snowy 
owl based on darkness and extent of barring. 


Rob Blye 
East Coventry Township 
Chester County, Pennsylvania 

----- Original Message -----
From: "Rob Blye" <[email protected]> 
To: "Kevin J. McGowan" <[email protected]> 
Cc: "Marie P. Read" <[email protected]>, "CAYUGABIRDS-L" 
<[email protected]> 
Sent: Saturday, January 11, 2014 8:50:22 AM 
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] age of Freeville Snowy Owl 


With respect to sex and age of snowy owls based on darkness of plumage, I 
recall reading (either on this list serv or PABirds) that an extensive banding 
study done in Canada did not yield a consistent way to sex or age snowy owls 
based on their plumage. It was likley posted by Scott Weidensaul who is part of 
project Snowstorm. 

Rob Blye 


Robert W. Blye 
300 Sanatoga Road 
Pottstown, PA 19465-7985 
rwblye at comcast dot net 
610 327-2010 
610 213-2413 


----- Original Message -----
From: "Kevin J. McGowan" <[email protected]> 
To: "Marie P. Read" <[email protected]>, "CAYUGABIRDS-L" 
<[email protected]> 
Sent: Friday, January 10, 2014 7:43:11 PM 
Subject: RE:[cayugabirds-l] age of Freeville Snowy Owl 

Yeah, don't believe it. This bears looking into, and I hope the data compiled 
by the Snowstorm project (http://www.projectsnowstorm.org/) might help shed 
some light on the subject. "Conventional wisdom" about darkness of markings 
being tightly correlated with age doesn't seem to be accurate. The Snowstorm 
folks are requesting submission of photos of flying birds so that they can 
assess the "molt limits" of the birds to assess age. 

Molt limits are the obvious differences in age of the wing coverts that appear 
on birds (at least Passerines and owls) in their first year of life when they 
molt out of juvenal plumage. Most birds that age do not molt their flight 
feathers (primaries, secondaries, tail feathers), but do molt most or all of 
their body feathers. It appears that how many wing coverts a juvenile molts is 
variable, with many only molting some. Consequently, many (most?) young birds 
in their first year of life, after their first summer, show a mixture of fresh 
and old wing coverts and can be distinguished from adults this way. I don't 
know how easily owl feather generations can be distinguished, but you can see 
an example of a presumed immature Snowy Owl at projectsnowstorm (taken by 
Cornell grad Tom Johnson). 

The heavily barred and quite dark female Snowy Owl that came in to the Lab this 
week did not show any obvious molt limits, and I presume that despite its heavy 
markings, it was not an immature. 

Kevin 


-----Original Message----- 
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marie P. Read 
Sent: Friday, January 10, 2014 7:15 PM 
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: RE:[cayugabirds-l] age of Freeville Snowy Owl 

<Why are people calling the Freeville bird an immature? 

Well I'm looking at my Sibley guide as I type (I have NOT seen the Freeville 
bird yet) and he DOES base age somewhat on body plumage. 
Sibley has "First Year female" as densely barred but always with a white face. 
The "Adult male" is described as "some are nearly pure white". Adult female and 
first year male are described as intermediate between the previous two 
plumages. 

Just sayin' ;-)) 


Marie 

Marie Read Wildlife Photography 
452 Ringwood Road 
Freeville NY 13068 USA 

Phone 607-539-6608 
e-mail [email protected] 

http://www.marieread.com 

***NEW*** Music of the Birds Vol 1 ebook for Apple iPad now available from 
iTunes 

http://itunes.apple.com/us/book/music-of-the-birds-v1/id529347014?mt=11 
________________________________________ 
From: [email protected] 
[[email protected]] on behalf of Kevin J. McGowan 
[[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, January 10, 2014 7:03 PM 
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] age of Freeville Snowy Owl 

Why are people calling the Freeville bird an immature? To the best of my 
knowledge, Snowy Owls, and especially females, cannot be aged by body plumage. 
The Snowstorm website, http://www.projectsnowstorm.org/, is asking for photos 
of flying birds so they can look at molt limits in the wings to judge age. 

Based on the darkness of the individual I was good with calling it a female, 
but I saw nothing to judge age. Did I miss something? 

Kevin 

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