Interesting observation Shawn.  

You might find this paper from "The Condor" interesting since it deals with 
prey selection by Northern Hawk-Owl. Of note is the reference to a Northern 
Hawk-Owl taking a Spruce Grouse as a prey item.

http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Condor/files/issues/v097n01/p0208-p0220.pdf

Terry Brashear

Hennepin County, MN

http://www.naturepixels.com

birdnird AT yahoo.com

--- On Wed, 11/18/09, Laura Erickson <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Laura Erickson <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [mou-net] Observations of a Hawk Owl...
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, November 18, 2009, 6:30 AM

This is a really interesting and insightful post! I suspect the interactions
noted by Shawn really do have, at heart, to do with the owl and jays'
caches, but we can't know this for sure until we've seen more of these
behaviors. This would be a fascinating thing for birders to keep track of
this winter, and deserves some sort of summary (by Shawn, I'd think) in The
Loon. Last year I got a couple of not-good but interesting photos of a raven
harassing a hawk owl--this is clearly a different thing, and so it would be
valuable for people who do notice interactions between Hawk Owl and Gray
Jays to send them on, especially when it's known who put food into the cache
and who is trying to get it.

There aren't a lot of interspecific interactions reported for the Northern
Hawk Owl. According to The Birds of North America Online:

>>Nonpredatory Interspecific Interactions

>>When surrounded by mobbing birds, individual sometimes makes itself thin
and assumes a position of camouflage, with eyes reduced to slits. May extend
neck forward and give Screeching Call (see Sounds: vocalizations, above; Cramp
1985<http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/356/articles/species/356/biblio/bib022>).
In Alaska, harassed most often by Gray Jay; also American Robin and Varied
Thrush (*Ixoreus naevius*); robins and thrushes strike perched owls on
occasion. Male hawk owl responded aggressively to an attacking American
Kestrel (*Falco sparverius*) by jumping from its perch and presenting its
talons as the kestrel dove (Kertell
1986<http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/356/articles/species/356/biblio/bib062>).
Generally remains conspicuous and unrestrained (Voous
1988<http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/356/articles/species/356/biblio/bib128>),
however; not easily displaced by smaller birds mobbing it (JRD, PAD).

>>Observed flying toward and displacing Pileated Woodpecker, in 1 case,
after woodpecker landed in same tree as owl (JRD, PAD); this is a prey
species, and hawk owls use nest cavities of this woodpecker for nesting.
Observed fanning tail and squawking loudly when Common Raven perched 50 m
away (R. W. Nero pers. comm.), but S. Wilson (pers. comm.) reported both
species within 40 m of each other with no interactions observed. In nw.
Ontario, observed chasing Common Raven several times from deer gut pile on
which the owl was feeding; pursued raven for 100 m (S. Walshe pers. comm.).

Best, Laura

(If you're interested, my raven-hawk owl photos are here:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/48014...@n00/3148423415/in/set-72157611402003364/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/48014...@n00/3149255012/in/set-72157611402003364/

Best,

Laura Erickson

in Ithaca, NY, dreaming of Peder's Barrow's Goldeneye, Erik's gulls, and
Northern Hawk Owls.


On Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 10:41 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:

> The Northern Hawk Owl that I happened upon today provided some interesting
> moments.  Most notably was the way in which it interacted with the local
> gray jay family.  By interaction, I actually mean complete lack of
> tolerance.  The owl was working a recently logged area in the middle of a
>  bog.
> Every and anytime the jays were within earshot, the hawk owl was  after
> them.
> At one point, I had lost view of the owl and was trying to  pish the jays
> in
> and one responded, coming in quite close to investigate.   The jay was
> sizing me up, when suddenly it gave a sharp AAAPP!!  (That's  what it
> sounded
> like), and took off just in time for me to hear a swooosh coming  over my
> head.
>  The hawk owl was in hot pursuit and appeared falcon like in  it's banking
> and maneuverability.  The owl was relentless in driving  the jays away.  I
> considered this for a while as I watched and  marveled.  Was the owl trying
> to catch and eat the jay?   Perhaps.  Are there records of hawk owls
> catching
> and eating gray  jays?  Would love to hear if anyone knows.  But then I
> observed  something that I really found interesting.  The owl, in between
> bouts
> of  jay chasing, removed a cached vole from a tree and flew to another tree
> and  re-cached the vole under some peeled bark and lichen in the fork of
> the tree some twenty feet off the ground.  I wonder if the jays,  clever as
> they are, have been watching where this owl has been caching  voles, and
> might not be stealing from the owl when the opportunity presents  itself?
> Like
> squirrels who watch where other squirrels cache their  nuts.  Would jays
> eat a vole?  Interesting to say the least.   Towards the end of my
> observing
> the owl, it caught another vole and cached  it eight feet off the ground,
> on
> the SIDE of a tree, in a crevice  created by peeling bark.  The owl had to
> hang on to the side of  the tree like a woodpecker while it worked the vole
> into the crack, only thing  showing when it was done was the tail and hind
> feet of the  vole.  During my watching the owl, it cached three voles in
> three
>  different trees including the re-cached vole.  And there are a lot of
> voles  in this area.  I counted five that skirted my footsteps during the
>  day.
> While in this area (Hedbom Bog) on the St. Louis County side, I also
> observed two male black backed woodpeckers, common redpolls (a few), red
> crossbills (a few),  american gold finches, and one pine grosbeak.   When
> the
> finches (or the ravens) saw the hawk owl, they would circle around it  and
> chatter in their own ways.  All in all, a very enjoyable way to spend a
>  very
> seasonable November Day.  Good Birding to you.  And, if  interested, I'll
> post a
> picture of today's owl in the showcase section of  MOU.
> Regards,
> Shawn Zierman.
>
> ----
> Join or Leave mou-net:http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=mou-net
> Archives:http://lists.umn.edu/archives/mou-net.html
>



-- 
-- 
Laura Erickson
Science Editor
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Ithaca, NY 14850
607-254-1114


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