The enigmatic Indian eagle-owl
- August 6, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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The enigmatic Indian eagle-owl
Subject :Environment
Section: Species in news
Context:
- The Indian eagle-owl was classified as a species only in recent years, thus distinguishing it from the Eurasian eagle-owl.
Indian eagle-owl:
- The Indian species is an imposing bird.
- The slightly larger female can reach a total length of two and a half feet, with a wingspan of six feet.
- Prominent ear tufts that look like horns are seen to project from its head.
- One theory holds that these have evolved to impart a threatening look that keeps away predators.
- It is nocturnal in nature.
- It is native to hilly and rocky scrub forests in the Indian Subcontinent.
- The widespread range — the entire Indian peninsula — indicates that it is a stable population.
- It is usually seen in pairs. It has a deep resonant booming call that may be heard at dawn and dusk.
- The Indian eagle-owl does not have a dependency on forests as their diet includes rats, bandicoots, and even bats and doves which are found in open scrubland and agricultural tracts.
- It nests on rocky perches and crags of those scrublands.
- Near human settlements, they prefer mango trees.
Benefits to farmers:
- Indian eagle-owls nesting near agricultural lands had more, and healthier, owlets than scrubland nesters.
- It controls the rodent populations in agricultural tracts thus preventing the loss.