Meet Our Resident Animals

Great Horned Owl

Meet Ruby

Great Horned Owl: Ruby

Brought to Sharon Audubon Center: September 22, 2013

Injury: Coracoid injury, partial left wing

History: Ruby came to the Sharon Audubon Center through the wildlife rehabilitation program after being struck by a car. She suffered from a fractured coracoid (a tiny support bone) and severely damaged feathers. Unfortunately, her injuries left her unable to use her left wing properly and required a partial amputation by veterinarians. She now resides in a large outside aviary with another Great Horned Owl named Baxter. Ruby is currently training to be an education program bird!

Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus)

Average Height: 18 - 26 inches

Average Weight: 2.5 - 3.5 lbs

Wingspan: 4 - 5 feet

Life Span: 15 - 20 years

Description: The Great Horned Owl is a large brown owl with "ear tufts," which are mistakenly thought to be the bird's ears. Its feathers are brown with heavy barring on the underparts. A white throat bib, yellow eyes, and a reddish-brown facial disk are distinctive features.

Call: Both sexes give a series of low hoots, which sound like, "Who's awake? Me too!" The males often give 4 - 5 hoots, "Hoo-hoo-oo, hoo, hoo." The female's call is lower in pitch and often gives a series of 6 - 8 hoots, "Hoo, hoo-hoo-hoo, hoo-oo, hoo-oo."

Range: Great Horns reside throughout the United States and most of Canada. It is a very common resident of Connecticut and New York.

Habitat: Great Horned Owls live in coniferous or deciduous forests, open woodlands, swamps, urban parks, and semi-desert areas.

Diet: The diet of Great Horned Owls includes rabbits, rodents, skunks, cats, frogs, snakes, and smaller birds, including owls. Great Horns are at the top of the food chain, so they have many preys, but very few predators. Man is the biggest predator of Great Horned Owls.

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