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During this time, the male continues to feed the female pygmy owl.
The pygmy owl has a small, short head with white to gray eyebrows and yellow eyes.
"An Amazonian pygmy owl is calling right now," he whispered.
The Northern Pygmy Owl is small and has a long tail.
Mountain Pygmy Owl "eyes in back of head"
It has also been considered a subspecies of the Least Pygmy Owl.
It is often considered to be a subspecies of Northern Pygmy Owl.
The Northern Pygmy Owl's stomach is white with black stripes.
It responds readily to the call of the Ferruginous Pygmy Owl.
Most pygmy owl species are nocturnal and hunt mainly large insects and other small prey.
Some experts consider this bird a superspecies with the Mountain Pygmy Owl.
Arrive for the daily display and meet some of the 40 species, from tiny pygmy owls to giant eagle owls.
Meanwhile, a pygmy owl belonging to a friend of Mr. Pye's disappears.
Such plans, like one around Tucson regarding the endangered pygmy owl, have been promoted by the Clinton and Bush administrations.
At the time of appeal, FWS had not yet made a critical habitat designation for the pygmy owl.
"We should spot the ferruginous pygmy owl - imagine an owl the size of a tennis ball .
The call is longer if the predator is a smaller nimble bird like a northern pygmy owl, which is more of a threat.
Several pygmy owls bear "false eyes" on the back of their head to fool predators into believing the owl is alert to their presence.
The Eurasian Pygmy Owl is usually red tinged to a grayish-brown with dots on his/her back.
The male Eurasian Pygmy Owls are very territorial and may use the same nesting territory for up to 7 years.
In an interview, Mr. Manson, the senior interior department official, suggested that would be a likely outcome in the pygmy owl case.
It is easily imitated, and is used by birdwatchers to attract small birds intent on mobbing the pygmy owls.
The beak of the Eurasian Pygmy Owl is a grayish yellow and hook shaped.
The Northern Pygmy Owl tends to perch in a diagonal position rather than an upright position.
Glaucidium Linnaeus (pygmy owls)
Glaucidium is also a plant genus in the Buttercup family, Ranunculaceae.
Glaucidium forms a paraphyletic group with Surnia.
Pygmy Owls are members of the genus Glaucidium.
The idea has long persisted that Paeonia belongs in Ranunculales, close to Glaucidium.
Glaucidium castaneum.
Glaucidium may refer to:
It has been widely believed that Paeonia is closest to Glaucidium, and this idea has been followed in some recent works.
The genus Glaucidium was once put in its own family (Glaucidiaceae), but has been recently recognised as a primitive member of Ranunculaceae.
The Albertine Owlet (Glaucidium albertinum) is a species of owl in the Strigidae family.
Glaucidium Linnaeus (pygmy owls)
Pernambuco Pygmy Owl Glaucidium mooreorum, from Brazil.
Some authorities consider it a subspecies of the Ferruginous Pygmy-owl, in which case it is called Glaucidium brasilianum pallens.
Bones of an indeterminate Glaucidium have been recovered from Late Pliocene deposits in Poland (Mlíkovský 2002).
PYGMY OWL Glaucidium passerinum.
Maximum parsimony and maximum likelihood phylogenetic trees created from nucleotide sequencing of the cytochrome b gene demonstrated that Surnia and Glaucidium form a paraphyletic group.
Molecular phylogenetic studies, however, have demonstrated conclusively that Glaucidium belongs in Ranunculaceae, but that Paeonia belongs in the unrelated order Saxifragales.
Primrose, Northern Pygmy Owl, Glaucidium gnoma, rescued from a forest fire and bought to the Great Ga'Hoole Tree the night of The Band's arrival.
The Asian Barred Owlet (Glaucidium cuculoides) is a species of true owl, resident in northern parts of the Indian Subcontinent and parts of Southeast Asia.
When the nearest relatives of the Northern Hawk Owl were unknown, Voous and Cameron (1989) initially noted similarities with the Glaucidium owls based on ear morphology and facial characteristics.
Numerous species of owl in the genus Glaucidium and the Northern Hawk-Owl have eye patches on the backs of their heads, apparently to convince other birds they are being watched at all times.