Blakiston's fish owl

Blakiston's fish owl
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Strigiformes
Family: Strigidae
Genus: Bubo (but see text)
Species: B. blakistoni
Binomial name
Bubo blakistoni
Seebohm, 1884

Blakiston's fish owl (Bubo blakistoni) is a fish owl, a sub-group of eagle owls who specialized in hunting riparian areas. This species is a part of the family known as typical owls (Strigidae) which contains most species of owl. Blakiston's fish owl and three related species were previously placed in the genus Ketupa; mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data is equivocal on which genus name is applied for this species.[1] Its habitat is riparian forest, with large, old trees for nest-sites, near lakes, rivers, springs and shoals that don't freeze in winter. Henry Seebohm named this bird after the English naturalist Thomas Blakiston, who collected the original specimen in Hakodate on Hokkaidō, Japan in 1883.

Taxonomy

It is more correct to call this species the Blakiston's eagle owl. This is because it is more closely related to the Eurasian eagle-owl by studies of the main subgenus of the species, B. b. dumeril, than to the subgenus of fish owls that it was believed to be more close to, i.e. Ketupu. This was proven by osteological (skeleton/bone-related) and DNA-based tests in 2003 by ornithologists/taxonomists Michael Wink and Claus König, author of Owls of the World.[2] However, the other fish owls are not believed to be divergent enough to support a separate genus either and now all fish owls are generally also included in the Bubo genus.[3] Given that it shares genetic material osteological characteristics with the eagle-owl and also seems to share some characteristics with the other three fish owls (especially the brown species), the place of the Blakiston's fish owls in this evolutionary chain is ambiguous. Some authors have wondered whether the Blakiston's represents an intermediate step between traditional eagle-owls and the other fish owls, despite the current gap in distribution between Blakiston's and other fish owls.[4] Whether other Asian eagle-owls with sideways slanting ear-tufts, namely the spot-bellied (B. nipalensis), the barred (B. sumatranus) and especially the somewhat superficially fish owl-like dusky eagle-owl (B. coromandus) are closely related to the fish owls and/or the Blakiston's is also unclear.[3][4] Despite a few authors also include them in Bubo, the fishing owls of Africa, generally classified in the genus Scotopelia, seem to be unrelated in every major way, based on external characteristics, oseology and preliminary genetic materials, to the fish owls and it is unclear how, and if, they are related to typical eagle-owls.[3][4]

Description

Illustration by J. G. Keulemans

Blakiston's fish owl is the largest living species of owl.[5] A pair field study of the species showed males weighing from 2.95 to 3.6 kg (6.5 to 7.9 lb), while the female, at up to 2.95 to 4.6 kg (6.5 to 10.1 lb), is about 25% larger.[6][7][8] Blakiston's fish owl measures 60 to 72 cm (24 to 28 in) in total length, and thus measures slightly less at average and maximum length than the great gray owl (Strix nebulosa), a species which has a significantly lower body mass.[2][9] The Eurasian eagle-owl (B. bubo) is sometimes considered the largest overall living owl species. The three largest races of eagle-owl, all found in Siberia and the Russian Far East, are close in size to the Blakiston's fish owl. According to Heimo Mikkola, the very largest specimen of eagle-owl was 30 mm (1.2 in) longer in bill-to-tail length than the longest Blakiston's fish owl, while the top weight of the two species is exactly the same.[3] The longest great gray owl was 120 mm (4.7 in) longer than the biggest Blakiston's fish owl but would be about 2.5 times lighter than the weight of the largest female Blakiston's.[4] However, the average measurements of Blakiston's fish owl surpass the average measurements of the Eurasian eagle-owl in the three major categories: weight, length, and wingspan, making Blakiston's the overall largest species of owl.[2][7] Even the large Siberian races of eagle-owl are slightly smaller on average than the Blakiston's, at least in terms of body mass and wing size.[4] The maximum wingspan of the Blakiston's fish owl is also greater than any known eagle-owl. The wingspan range known for Blakiston's fish owls is 178 to 190 cm (70 to 75 in).[3] The Blakiston's is noticeably larger than the other three extant species of fish owl.[2][7]

In terms of structure, the Blakiston's fish owl is more similar to eagle-owls than it is to other fish owls but it shares a few characteristics with both types of owl. Like all fish owls, its bill is relatively long, the body relatively husky and wings are relatively long compared to eagle-owls. It also shares with other fish owls a comparatively long tarsi, although relative to their size the three smaller fish owl have a proportionately longer tarsus. Other than these few characteristics, a Blakiston's fish owl skull and skeleton is practically the same as that of a Eurasian eagle-owl. The talons of the Blakiston's fish owl are similar in shape and size to those of the Eurasian eagle-owls. It has been stated that the combination of wavy cross patterns on the underside of the Blakiston's plumage and its huge talons make it look strikingly like an outsized great horned owl (B. virginianus) from below.[4] Two external characteristics that Blakiston's share with eagle-owls, but not with the other fish owls, is that its tarsi are totally feathered and that its wing beats are silent, although apparently the Blakiston's has relatively fewer sound-blocking combs on its wing primaries than the a comparable eagle-owl would. Among standard measurements, which at average and maximum are greater than any other living owl other than tail length, the wing chord measures 447–560 mm (17.6–22.0 in), the tail measures 243–305 mm (9.6–12.0 in), the tarsus is 73–102 mm (2.9–4.0 in) and the culmen is around 55 to 71 mm (2.2 to 2.8 in).[2][10][11]

Superficially, this owl somewhat resembles the Eurasian eagle-owl but is paler and has relatively broad and ragged ear tufts which hang slightly to the side. The upperparts are buff-brown and heavily streaked with darker brown coloration. The underparts are a paler buffish brown and less heavily streaked. The throat is white. The iris is yellow (whereas the Eurasian eagle-owl typically has an orange iris). The Eurasian eagle-owl and Blakiston's fish owl both occur in the Russian Far East and are potentially could compete for resources, although no scientifically observed interactions of any kind have been reported between these two largest owl species. It is likely, given the sizeable gap between the dietary preferences of the species (mainly aquatic animals in the Blakiston's, mainly upland, terrestrial species in the eagle-owl) that competition for food is not normally a serious problem.[4][12] Identification of the Blakiston's from other fish owls is not an issue as there is a gap of distribution of approximately 800 km (500 mi) between the ranges of the Blakiston's and the tawny fish owl (B. flavipes) and about 2,000 km (1,200 mi) separates the range of the Blakiston's and the brown fish owl (B. zeylonensis).[4] Improbably, early naturalist thought that the Blakiston's and brown fish owls belonged to the same species. The streaking on the underside of the Brown and Blakiston's are similar and their songs sound more similar to each other than they do with the two songs of the other two species of fish owl.[4]

Vocalizations differ among the recognized subspecies. In the nominate subspecies from Japan, the male calls twice and the female responds with one note, whereas the mainland subspecies has a somewhat more elaborate, four-note duet: HOO-hoo, HOOO-hoooo (here, the male call is in capital letters (HOO) and the female call in lower case (hoo)). The transliterations of the calls of owls from Russia, representative of the owl's vocal variations, are SHOO-boo and FOO-foo-foo. The territorial song or call in Russia in particular has been described as somewhat like a short, deep eagle-owl's call.[4] Despite its slightly larger size, the Blakiston's fish owls voice is not as sonorous or as far-carrying as is the Eurasian eagle-owl's voice is.[13] As in most owls, vocal activity tends to peak directly before nesting activity begins, so peaks around February in this species.[13] This duet of pairs of Blakiston's fish owl in the period leading up the breeding season is so synchronized that those unfamiliar with the call often think it is only one bird calling. When an individual bird calls, it may sound like hoo-hooo. Juveniles have a characteristic shriek, typically a startling and slurred phee-phee-phee.[2][4]

Subspecies

Of the following four subspecies described in the literature, only the first two (B. b. blakistoni & B. b. doerriesi) are currently accepted by science.[14] The other two (B. b. karafutonis and B. b. piscivorus) were likely specimens of B. b. blakistoni & B. b. doerriesi, respectively, and are presented here only for historical interest.[2]

Habitat

Blakiston's fish owl occurs in dense old-growth forest near waterways or wooded coastlines. The species requires cavernous old-growth tree cavities for suitable nest sites and stretches of productive rivers that remain at least partially unfrozen in winter. In the frigid northern winters, open water is found only where the current is sufficiently fast-flowing or there is an upwelling of warm spring water.[14] Slower-moving streams are equally likely to support these owls as the main river channels and they only need a few meters of open water to survive a winter.[15]

Feeding and behavior

A Blakiston's fish owl hunting during winter.

The Blakiston's fish owl feeds on a variety of aquatic prey. The main one is fish, with common prey including pike (Esox reichertii), catfish, trout and salmon (Oncorhynchus ssp.). Some fish these owls catch are quite large. Jonathan Slaght estimated that some fish caught are up to two to three times their own weight and has seen owls keep one foot on a tree root to be able to haul a large catch onto a bank.[5] In Russia, amphibians are taken in great quantity in spring, especially Dybowski's frog (Rana dybowskii), and may come to seasonally outnumber fish in the diet during that time.[13] Crayfish (Cambaroides ssp.) and other crustaceans are known to be taken in some numbers, but the extent of their importance in the Blakiston's fish owl's diet is unknown. Freshwater crabs and secondarily frogs seem to be numerical as important, or sometimes more significant, as a source of food as compared to fish for the three smaller fish owl species, other than frogs during spring thus far this has not proven to be the case with the Blakiston's fish owl. The only owl species to which fish are more significant to their diet is the fishing owls of Africa.[3][4][15] Blakiston's fish owls seem to co-exist with Steller's sea eagles (Haliaeetus pelagicus) and white-tailed eagles (H. albicilla) on the coasts of the rocky Kurile Islands but nothing is known how they relate with these larger fish-eating raptors, the presence of which has sometimes been theorized as partially the cause of the restricted range of the Blakiston's due to competition for similar food resources. However, in other raptor communities, diurnal raptors and owls can co-exist successfully given their distinct times of activity. Furthermore, Blakiston's fish owl generally dwells in forested areas while sea eagles are more likely to forage near more open wetland or coastal areas.[4]

A wide variety of mammalian prey are described from Japan and becomes most important to the diet during winter.[13] Smaller mammals taken have included martens (Martes ssp.) and numerous rodents.[16] Unidentified bats have turned up occasionally in Blakiston's fish owl pellets in the Russian Far East, although bats were much more prominent in the diet of Eurasian eagle-owls there (79 eagle-owl pellets and 10 fish owl pellets had bat remains, respectively).[12] Large mammals are sometimes taken by this species, including hares (Lepus ssp.), rabbits, fox, cats (Felis catus) and small dogs (Canis lupus familiaris).[2][14] Fewer records are known of bird predation, but they are known to capture avian prey such as hazel grouse (Tetrastes bonasia) and a variety of waterfowl species.[14][15] A case where a black-crowned night heron (Nycticorax nycticorax), a rare species in Japan, was chased in flight by a male fish owl was observed but the heron managed to evade capture. A similar case of a fish owl chasing a grey heron (Ardea cinerea) has also been reported.[17]

The two most common hunting methods for Blakiston's fish owl are wading through river shallows and perching on the river bank and waiting for movement in the water. Other waterside perches may include logs.[13] In this behavior, an individual may wait for four hours until it detects prey and the species is perhaps most often witnessed while hunting in this method. Upon identifying prey, fish owls either drop directly into the shallow water or sail a short distance.[2][15] It also takes carrion, as evidenced by fish owls in Russia being trapped in snares set for furbearing mammals, which use raw meat as bait.[14] While small prey such as frogs and crayfish are taken back to an habitual perch for immediate consumption, larger prey such as fish and waterfowl are dragged onto a bank and finished off before being flown off with.[15]

These owls are primarily active at dusk and dawn. During the brood-rearing season, these owls are relatively more likely to be seen actively hunting or brooding during the day. For an owl, it spends unusual amounts of time on the ground. Occasionally, an owl may even trample out a regular foot path along riverbanks it uses for hunting.[2] Early reports of concentrations of as many as 5-6 owls near rapids and non-freezing springs are dubious, as these owls are highly territorial.[14]

Breeding

This bird does not breed every year due to fluctuations in food supply and conditions. Courting occurs in January or February. Laying of eggs begins as early as mid-March, when ground and trees are still covered with snow.[4] These owls prefer nesting in hollow tree cavities in Japan[18] and Russia.[14] Mature forests with a mixture of coniferous and deciduous trees is usually the preferred nesting habitat.[19] In Russia, trees selected for nesting can consist of elm (Ulmus ssp.), Japanese poplar (Populus maximowiczii), willow (Salix ssp.), chosenia (Chosenia arbutifolia), Mongolian oak (Quercus mongolica), ash (Sorbus ssp.), and stone birch (Betula ermanii). Nest height range is 2–18 m (6 ft 7 in–59 ft 1 in), but normally is at least 12 m (39 ft) of the ground.[4][15] Reports of nesting on fallen tree trunks and on the forest floor are very rare occurrences at best and possibly untrue. Other than nest cavities, there are very isolated records of nesting on cliff shelves and in old black kite (Milvus migrans) nests.[18][20]

Nest cavities have to be quite large in order to accommodate these birds. Clutch size is 1 to 3, usually 2.[14] In Russia, clutches are usually just one egg.[14] Eggs are 6.2 cm (2.4 in) long and 4.9 cm (1.9 in) wide and are thus similar in size to Siberian eagle-owl eggs. The males provide food for the incubating female and later the nestlings. The incubation period is about 35 days and young leave the nest within 35–40 days but are often fed and cared for by their parents for several more months. Data on breeding success are scant: on Kunashir Island during a six-year period breeding success was 24%; with six fledglings resulting from 25 eggs.[21] The average weight of fledgling owls was about 40% lighter than adult size, averaging 1.96 kg (4.3 lb) in females and 1.85 kg (4.1 lb) in males.[8] Juveniles linger on their parents' territory for up to two years before dispersing to find their own. A study in Hokkaido found that male fledglings were about 10% more numerous than females but had a higher mortality rate post-fledgling.[8] Blakiston's fish owls can form pair bonds as early as their second year and reach sexual maturity by age three. This unusually long pre-dispersal period may be why this owl is occasionally reported as gregarious, as sets of parents and juveniles will congregate but not unrelated owls.[15]

Once full-sized, these owls have few natural predators. However, they may be more vulnerable to attack from mammalian carnivores since, unlike other eagle owls which typically perch and hunt from trees or inaccessible rock formations, they hunt mainly on the ground along riverbanks. There are two records of natural predation on adults from Russia and none in Japan: one involved a Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx)[14] and the other an Asian black bear (Ursus thibetanus).[22]

Status

A stuffed Blakiston's fish owl at the National Museum of Nature and Science in Tokyo.

The Blakiston's fish owl is endangered due to the widespread loss of riverine forest, increasing development along rivers and dam construction. The current population in Japan is approximately 100-150 birds (20 breeding pairs and unpaired individuals), whereas on mainland Asia the population is higher, variously estimated at several hundred or perhaps thousands of individuals.[14] In Russia, fish owls are killed by fur-trappers (see above), drown in nets set for salmon, and are shot by hunters.[14] In Japan, death by hunting is unlikely, but fish owls have been hit by cars and killed by power lines.[20] Local conservation efforts in Japan have been undertaken including education and installation of large nest-boxes. Biologists have found the presence of Blakiston's fish owls as good indicators of the health and disturbance level of a forest and of fish populations.[23]

Importance to indigenous peoples

Blakiston's fish owl is revered by the Ainu peoples of Hokkaido, Japan as a Kamuy (divine being) called Kotan koru Kamuy (God that Protects the Village). In Russia, the species is considered a food source by the Evens people in northern Siberia and the northern Russian Far East.[24] In the past, fish owls were hunted as a food source by the Udege peoples in Primorye and were favored due to their high fat content;[22] however, the practice has locally fallen out of favor.[14]

References

  1. Olsen, Jerry; Wink, Michael; Sauer-Gürth, Heidi & Trost, Susan (2002). "A new Ninox owl from Sumba, Indonesia." (PDF) Emu 102(3): 223-231. doi:10.1071/MU02006
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Konig, Claus; Weick, Friedhelm & Becking, Jan-Hendrik (2009). Owls of the World. Yale University Press (2009), ISBN 0-300-14227-7.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Mikkola, H. (2012). Owls of the World: A Photographic Guide. Firefly Books. ISBN 978-1-770-85136-8
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Voous, K. H. (1988). Owls of the Northern Hemisphere. The MIT Press, ISBN 0262220350.
  5. 1 2 Angier, Natalie (2013-02-25). "The Owl Comes Into Its Own". The New York Times. Retrieved 2013-02-27. Nearly a yard high, weighing up to 10 pounds and with a wingspan of six feet, Blakiston's is the world's largest owl...
  6. National Geographic
  7. 1 2 3 del Hoyo, J.; Elliot, A. & Sargatal, J. (1996). Handbook of the Birds of the World. 3. Barcelona: Lynx Edicions. ISBN 84-87334-20-2.
  8. 1 2 3 Hayashi, Y. & Nishida-Umehara, C. (November 2000). "Sex ratio among fledglings of Blakiston's fish owls." (PDF) Jpn. J. Ornithol. 49(3): 119–129 doi:10.3838/jjo.49.119
  9. BirdLife International. "Blakiston's Eagle-owl (Bubo blakistoni)." Retrieved 2016-02-03.
  10. Dresser, Henry Eeles (1902). "699. Japanese Eagle-owl. Bubo blackstoni." A Manual of Palaearctic Birds, Volume I.
  11. 1 2 3 Weick, Friedhelm (2007). Owls (Strigiformes): Annotated and Illustrated Checklist. Springer. p. 120. ISBN 978-3-540-39567-6.
  12. 1 2 Rosina, V. V. & Shokhrin, V. P. (2011). "Bats in the diets of owls from the Russian Far East, southern Sikhote Alin". Hystrix It. J. Mamm. (n.s.) 22(1): 205–213. doi:10.4404/Hystrix-22.1-4503
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 Brazil, M. A. & Yamamoto, S. (1989). "The behavioural ecology of Blakiston's fish owl Ketupa blakistoni in Japan: calling behaviour". In World Working Group on Birds of Prey and Owls. Raptors in the Modern World. Berlin, Germany. pp. 403–410. ISBN 3-9801961-0-0.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Slaght, Jonathan C.; Surmach, Sergei G. (March 2008). "Biology and Conservation of Blakiston's Fish-Owls (Ketupa blakistoni) in Russia: A Review of the Primary Literature and an Assessment of the Secondary Literature" (PDF). J. Raptor Res. 42 (1): 29–37. doi:10.3356/JRR-06-89.1. Retrieved 2012-12-28.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Avdeyuk, Sergei; Slaght, Jonathan; Surmach, Sergei (eds.). "Blakiston's Fish Owl Natural History". Blakiston's Fish Owl Project. Retrieved 2016-02-03.
  16. Yamamoto, S. (1999). The Blakiston's fish owl. The Hokkaido Shimbun Press, Sapporo, Japan.
  17. Brazil, M. (1986). "An unusual case of aggression by a fish-owl." J. Yamashina Inst. Ornith. 18(2): 71–72. doi:10.3312/jyio1952.18.2_71
  18. 1 2 Takenaka, T. (1998). Distribution, habitat environments, and reasons for reduction of the endangered Blakiston's fish owl in Hokkaido, Japan (Ph.D.). Hokkaido University.
  19. Hayashi, Y. (September 1997). "Home range, habitat use and natal dispersal of Blakiston's fish-owls." J. Raptor Res. 31(3): 283–285.
  20. 1 2 Yanagawa, H. (1993). "Causes of wild bird mortality in Eastern Hokkaido". Strix 12: 161–169.
  21. Berzan, A. P. (2000). "Blakiston's fish owl observations on Kunashir Island, and methods to habituate the species to artificial nesting." Rus. Ornitol. Zh 119: 3–12.
  22. 1 2 "Blackiston's Fish Owls: Conservation Threats". WCS Russia. Retrieved 2016-02-03.
  23. Slaght, J. C.; Surmach, S. G. & Gutiérrez, R. J. (August 2013). "Riparian old-growth forests provide critical nesting and foraging habitat for Blakiston's fish owl Bubo blakistoni in Russia." Oryx 47(04): 553–560. doi:10.1017/S0030605312000956
  24. Andreev, A. V. (2009). "The Blakiston's fish owl (Ketupa blakistoni) at the north-eastern limits of its range." Osnabrücker Naturwissenschaftliche Mitteilungen 35: 47–54.

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