Posts Tagged ‘United States’
Operation Barn Owl Nest Box | Farm Bureau | Article
Published February 24th,2010 In the Iowa Farm Bureau Spokesman.
Operation Barn Owl Nest box
By Tim Love of Love’s Wildlife Control
Love’s Wildlife Control is proud to announce the involvement of Farm Bureau into the Operation Barn Owl Nest box project. Marion County Farm Bureau has graciously awarded a $500 community Enhancement Grant to LWC. The grant is good on a first come first served basis for $25 off a purchase of a Barn Owl Nest box or boxes for the first 20 Marion County members who get involved. The boxes are sold and installed by Love’s Wildlife Control. All sales and donations are put directly back into the project. Donations are greatly appreciated. Actual retail costs of these boxes are over $100 dollars each, but are currently being sold and installed by Love’s Wildlife Control locally for $70.
The Creation- My name is Tim Love, owner and operator of Love’s Wildlife Control (LWC). I resolve conflicts between humans and wildlife. I specialize in pocket gopher and mole control. Last spring (09’) while attending the Hawkeye Farm Show in Cedar Falls, a visitor to my booth told me that he used Barn Owls to keep his gophers in check in his hayfields. This conversation led me to begin research on the Barn Owl. I spent a great deal of time on the Internet and the telephone learning as much as I could about these amazing birds. I came to the conclusion that here in Iowa the barn owl has an abundance of prey available but few and dwindling numbers of nesting sites. I believe I am fortunate to operate a business doing what I love to do and feel compelled to give back to Mother Nature. I want to help the Barn Owl. Operation Barn Owl Nest box is a part of my business that I have set aside to operate at cost, to give back to nature.
The Plan- Give the Barn Owls a Home. Barn Owls are an endangered bird in Iowa. Barn Owls are very “wimpy” birds and have a high mortality rate but this high mortality is off-set by being highly prolific. 200 years ago, Iowa had large numbers of old hollow trees in which the barn owl could call home. In time, many of these trees were cleared by humans for development either for residential or agricultural use. As these trees were eliminated the Barn Owl adapted and took advantage of barns for protection, thus the name Barn Owl. Today many of the old barns have been remodeled with steel siding and access has been denied to the Barn Owl. The barns that have not been updated either are destroyed or left to ruin. This basically has left the Barn Owl homeless in Iowa. My plan is to erect as many nest boxes as I possibly can. This is the only logical thing we can do to help the Barn Owl. I believe that once these birds begin to find and use the boxes their natural abilities will bring their population back to acceptable levels in Iowa. This comeback will take years to happen and be slow in the beginning but once we have significant numbers of these birds reproducing, and continue to create homes for them, the population can thrive.
The Benefits- Having Barn Owls living on or near your property is very beneficial because these birds diet consists of nearly 100% rodents. A pair of Barn Owls feeding young, account for literally thousands of rodents consumed a year. The main rodent on their diet is the vole but mice, rats, moles, shrews, and gophers fit the bill as well. Rodents take refuge in terraces, waterways, fencerows and outbuildings. When larger predators such as the badger, fox, coyote, and skunk pursue these rodents in those places, considerable damage is done to your property. Rodenticide spread over the land is costly and unsafe to non targets, humans included. Control has different meanings to different people. I do not want to give the impression that Barn Owls will end all your rodent problems but that Barn Owls do provide a balance and make a considerable dent in the rodent population. Barn Owls in my opinion are a farmers best friend and employee as they work 24/7/365 consuming rodents.
Guarantee- There is no guarantee that you will get a Barn Owl to use the boxes. I can guarantee if there is no nest site available on your property you will not have them reproducing and thriving on your land. In my mind I see zero nest sites now. If we put two boxes in an area and 1 pair raises one brood of 5 young we are now short 4 boxes. You can clearly see the challenges that the Barn Owls face, all revved-up and nowhere to go! Since Barn Owls can have 2 broods a year you can understand why I think it is important to get as many boxes up as possible. Even one box in an area is a good start as more can be added later if a mated pair is known to exist.
Jessica Love after installing Nest box near Beech, IA.
To Date- Currently we have 26 boxes installed and 9 more boxes sold and ready to put up when the weather is fit. We can mount the uprights to an existing fence post but have found that it is best to mount the box on a 16’ 4X4 and set this in the ground. The boxes are made with ½” plywood sun shades built onto them. The box openings always face east to avoid the bad weather. The boxes are constructed of ¾” CDX plywood in such a way that water is shed off; they are screwed and glued together. They are stained gray with a very high quality stain made by “Super Deck” which features Carnauba oil. The upright posts are mounted to the bottom of the box with a steel bracket and are wrapped with a sheet of 24” aluminum flashing to keep climbing predators and unwanted guests out. This is the beginning of this project, so I do not know of any boxes being used but I have spotted 4 barn owls since last fall. Next fall (2010) Marla and I will be checking all the boxes for signs of use.
Pastures, next to row crops, provide plenty of rodents for Barn Owls.
Conclusion- Barn Owls need our help. Seeing a Barn Owl is like a religious experience to me and other bird lovers I have talked too. They are cavity dwellers and operate by cover of darkness so they are seldom seen. Many people I have talked with remember when they were young having a pair of Barn Owls in their barn. The main predators of Barn Owls are the Great Horned Owl and the raccoon. Since most hollow trees and old barns are currently occupied by the Raccoon, safe nest sites are very limited for the Barn Owl. Keeping these boxes out in the grasslands and away from the big woods offers the best protection from the Great Horned Owl and the aluminum flashing on the box post keeps the raccoon at bay. If you are a Marion County member and are interested in purchasing one or more boxes contact Farm Bureau at 641-842-6214. If you are not a Marion County FB member you may contact Love’s Wildlife Control at 641-891-7194.
Acknowledgements-The success of this project would not be possible without these people and I want to thank them for their help so far. First Lloyd Philips of Knoxville, IA has afforded me the use of his woodworking shop to build these boxes. Lloyd’s input of the box design and the hours that he volunteers towards this project, Bruce Ehresman of the IDNR for his past Barn Owl research and input into this project, Marla Mertz the Naturalist for Marion County Conservation Board, for here encouragement and very helpful presentation ideas, John Schuster of “Wild Wing Co.” of CA for his input of the boxes as well as information on the Birds, Paul Vitek of Spahn and Rose Lumber and Jeff Isley of Isley Welding and Repair both of Knoxville for the charitable contributions. Thank you all very much, Tim
Tim Love and Lloyd Phillips with the first box installed in Kay Harsin’s pasture.
For further information on the Barn Owl and the Operation Barn Owl Nest box project visit www.absolutegophercontrol.com and click on the Operation Barn Owl Nest box tab. Here you will find more in-depth details of the project and links to other sites about Barn Owls and information on how to order the video “Backyard Barn Owls” by Bert Kersey. This video is fantastic and worth every penny.
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Ehresman Owl Restoration | Part 1 | Iowa Owl Conservation
Published in Proceedings at the National Wildlife Rehabilitation Symposium—1984.
Common Barn-Owl Restoration in Iowa
By Bruce L. Ehresman
Common Barn-Owl Restoration in Iowa
Bruce L. Ehresman
Iowa Conservation Commission, Wildlife Research Station
Boone, IA 50036
Abstract: One goal of the Iowa Conservation Commission’s Nongame Program is to increase the population of the Common Barn-owl, an Iowa endangered species. Reasons for restoration include its economic value as a destroyer of grain-eating rodents, its aesthetic value to humans, and publicity for the Nongame Program.
The Iowa Conservation Commission acquires barn-owls used for restoration from other rehabilitation centers and zoos in coastal states where the owls are abundant. We use these owls either for captive breeding at the Wildlife Research Station near Boone, or for placement at selected release sites, primarily in southern Iowa. We choose release sites from areas volunteered by the public, using evaluation criteria we developed. At each release site, commission personnel enclose a section of a building to contain the owls for gentle release. Barn-owl nest box construction in release site areas is promoted. Nearly 40 boxes were erected in 1983. We place barn-owls as mated pairs, pairs with young, or groups of immature.
In 1983, we banded and released 12 adult and 46 immature barn-owls using gentle release methods. Media coverage of restoration efforts has resulted in strong public support, evidenced by Iowa’s income tax refund Checkoff participation.
Barn-owls released in 1983, and future releases, will augment Iowa’s remaining breeding population, and nest boxes erected will re-create needed nest sites.
The Common Barn-owl, as most birds of prey, has been persecuted since it first came into contact with humans. It has been the victim of random and injudicious shooting, trapping, and poisoning. Most tragically, its habitat, including critical nesting sites, has been destroyed because of human ignorance in the pursuit to “improve” our way of life on this planet. The Iowa Conservation Commission (ICC) has embarked on a restoration program to change this unjustified public attitude and to increase the population of the Common Barn-owl, an Iowa Endangered species (Roosa 1977).
DISTRIBUTION
The Barn-owl family, Tytonidae, has a worldwide distribution. It consists of eleven living species and approximately 35 subspecies. Only one of these subspecies, Tyto alba pratincola, is found throughout North America. Populations in the United States are chiefly coastal, decreasing northwards. The Barn-owl is considered a rare, permanent resident of Iowa. Because it is intolerant of cold climates (Bunn et al. 1982), it rarely breeds in the northern part of the state. Most recent sightings indicate it is most numerous in the grassland areas of the south and west portions of the state.
ECONOMIC VALUE
Before European settlers arrived, Barn-owls nested primarily in the hollow cavities of old sycamores and cottonwoods. With the cutting of these cavity trees, the Barn-owl adapted to the use of man-made structures for nesting. It also switched from eating mice and voles of native grasslands, to feed on the rats and mice that were attracted to stored grain on farmsteads. According to Lewis Walker (1974), a Barn-owl authority, single owls saves the State of California between $20 and $50 annually in its predation on pocket gophers, where pocket gophers and ground squirrels cause an estimated crop loss of 10% each year. Add to this its services in destroying voles and mice (its preferred prey), and these owls certainly do have a positive economic impact.
STATUS
It is unfortunate that a species so beneficial to humans is becoming so rare in the Midwest. Presently, the Barn-owl is listed as Endangered not only in Iowa, but also in Missouri (Wadell and Crawford 1982), Illinois (Becker 1978), and Wisconsin (Petersen 1979), and is considered threatened in Michigan (Taylor 1978).
LIMITING FACTORS
Decline of the Barn-owl can probably be attributed to a combination of factors, some interrelated. Loss of habitat, especially loss of nest sites, may be an especially important factor. Farmers have bulldozed vacant farm buildings and old hollow trees that once provided nest and roost sites, to prepare more land on which to grow cash grain crops. Modern clean-farming practices and the elimination of hay and pasture ground, prevalent on farms as recently as the mid 1960’s, has reduced habitat of the Barn-owl’s small-mammal prey.
Pesticide and rodenticide use undoubtedly have negative effects on the predator Barn-owl. Use of pesticides, particularly the chlorinated hydrocarbons, was probably most detrimental to Barn-owl populations 15 to 20 years ago before stringent regulations banned, or at least regulated their use (Bunn et al. 1982).
In Iowa, there are at least two predators that exploit the Barn-owl. Raccoons inhabiting old farm buildings harass and predate nesting Barn-owls. In the past few decades, raccoon numbers have increased in Iowa (Andrews et al. 1982) and adjoining states such as Wisconsin (Petersen 1979b). Competition with and predation by Great Horned Owls may also be a limiting factor (Wayne 1924).
Certainly collisions with automobiles, trains, power lines, etc., take a toll on Iowa’s Barn-owl population. From 1981 to 1983, 4 of 6 reported Barn-owl mortalities in Iowa were attributed to collisions.
Severe winter weather also affects survival of Barn-owls. Stewart (1952) indicated Barn-owl survival in its northern range was more influenced by snow cover amount than low temperatures. Petersen (1979a) found that snow cover depth of 10 cm or more provided cover for small mammals and protected them from owl predation in southern Wisconsin, which corresponds in latitude to northern Iowa. Since the Barn-owl maintains the lowest body fat reserves (5.5%) of all owls examined by Piechocki (1960), it seems likely the Barn-owl cannot survive more than 3 to 4 days without feeding (Stewart 1952), especially during periods of sub-zero temperatures. Two of 4 wild Barn-owl mortalities reported in Iowa in 1983 were attributed to starvation during severe winter weather.
RESTORATION
- States of Development
Since Iowa’s Barn-owl has been decreasing for several decades, and since the Barn-owl breeds readily in captivity, recommendations were made by Iowa’s State Ecologist, Dean Roosa (1977), to embark on a captive breeding and restoration program. Common Barn-owl restoration in Iowa began as an offshoot of the ICC’s raptor rehabilitation project at the Wildlife Research Station (WRS) near Boone. From 1960 top 1980, the facilities were used to hold birds and mammals for the state Wildlife Exhibit. Funding provided by hunting and fishing license fees allowed a wildlife rehabilitation project to begin in the late 1970’s, when Iowa’s first nongame biologist was hired. A reduction in State expenditures forced the closure of the Wildlife Exhibit in 1980.
Raptor rehabilitation at the WRS still continues, but since the fall of 1982, our main emphasis is on captive breeding, rehabilitation, and restoration of the Common Barn-owl. Reasons for restoration include its economic value as a destroyer of grain-eating rodents, its aesthetic value to humans, and publicity for the Nongame Program. Funding is now derived from an Iowa income tax refund Checkoff initiated in tax-year 1982 for Iowa’s Nongame Program.
B. Source
Since it was virtually impossible to locate native Barn-owls for captive breeding, we had to look to outside sources. We contacted successful breeders mentioned in International Zoo Yearbooks, and publicized our project in several veterinary journals and magazines. Response was good. So far, we have received Barn-owls by air-freight shipment from rehabilitation centers in zoos in Washington, Oregon, California, Louisiana, and South Carolina. We paid air-freight costs, and during 1982-83 we received 71 Barn-owls at an average cost of about $13 per owl. We use these owls either for captive breeding at WRS facilities or for placement at selected release sites.
C. Housing
Housing facilities at the WRS include a 14’x80’ wooden building divided into 8, 10’x7’8’ (LWH) and 4, 10’x4’x8’ pens, and a 40’x60’ steel shed containing 8, 8’x7’x8’ breeding pens connected to exterior 20’x8’x8’ flight chambers. Pens are wood framed, with walls of corrugated fiberglass panels and olefin netting. Most pens are visually separated by solid partitions to allow breeding Barn-owl pairs privacy. We place nest boxes in each pen, as well as various diameter tree branch perches. Metal flashing or smooth fiberglass skirting, two feet height, placed around the perimeter of each pen retains live mice for the owls to prey upon. Small pea gravel covers floors to facilitate cleaning. We clean pens about every three weeks, except when hens need minimum disturbance during nesting.
D. Feeding
The diet and health of captive Barn-owls requires continuous attention. We feed routinely six days a week and fast one. Food is placed on wooden pallets, and uneaten food is removed daily. During winter months, heated food trays, modeled after those of Katherine McKeever (1979), keep the owls’ meals from freezing. We disinfect feeding pallets periodically to ensure harmful microorganisms are not transmitted to or between the owls.
Diet consists of a prepared Birds of Prey diet[1], day-old cockerel chicks culled from a local hatchery, and laboratory mice acquired from the National Animal Disease Center and Iowa State Diagnostic Laboratory in Ames. We feed these three different food items on a rotational basis to assure a balanced diet for the owls. Day-old chicks, deficient in calcium, are powdered with bonemeal before begin fed, and other supplemental minerals and vitamins are added to the diet when necessary.
E. Medical
We treat sick or injured birds according to recommendations made at the Iowa State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine in Ames. They provide treatment and diagnoses at a teaching discount, since we provide some hands-on experience with wildlife species for students training at the clinic. We also isolate new birds brought into the facility to prevent the introduction of pathogenic organisms to or from other birds. Our personnel keep records on each owl’s health and history.
F. Captive breeding
The ICC hopes to increase wild Barn-owl populations by releasing breeding pairs with young, and fledglings from other rehabilitators, as well as from our captive breeding pairs. All owls received from other sources are at least temporarily held at WRS facilities. Permanent cripples, human imprints, and owls that have been held several years in captivity comprise most of our captive breeders. We pair the owls for breeding according to size, temperament, age, and body condition; and place them together using methods suggested by McKeever (1979). Owls of similar sizes and temperament are our most successful breeders.
G. Release site suitability
Before Barn-owls can be placed, release sites must be selected. We choose release sites primarily from areas volunteered by the public. After reading about this project in the newspaper, cooperators, who feel they have adequate hack sites and are willing to feed captive Barn-owls, notify Iowa’s nongame biologist. We send volunteers a “Barn-owl Release Site Preliminary Evaluation” form to complete and return. They complete this form with an aerial photograph of the proposed site, obtained from their local ASCS office. We evaluate and rate each returned form and choose release sites from those forms indicating the best habitat for Barn-owls.
Evaluation of the proposed release site includes the area within a one-mile radius of the release site structure (roughly 2,000 acres), based on the owls’ hunting behavior. The release site structure must be undisturbed, and able to be made “owl tight” with a few hours’ work. Criteria for choosing a release site are as follows:
Positive aspects –
(1) Abundant grassland (pasture, hayfields, waterways, roadsides)
(2) Timber in large, continuous tracts (if present)
(3) Several people willing to feed and care for owls
(4) Other undisturbed nest sites available nearby
Negative aspects –
(1) Large amounts of cash grain crops
(2) Resident Great Horned Owls present
(3) Nearby use of rodenticides
Basically, we are looking for areas with a large proportion of permanent grassland, which have several undisturbed potential nesting sites (Bunn et. Al. 1982), and few Great Horned Owls present. Dense grasses provide good habitat for small mammals which the Barn-owl prefers as prey. Old vacant buildings or large hollow trees provide adequate nest sites. Since Great Horned Owls have been known to prey upon Barn-owls, we prefer to release our owls where such predators are not numerous. Most release sites are in areas where Barn-owls are present, or were present, within the last 5 to 20 years.
H. Release site preparation
Once a release site with a suitable confinement structure is selected, the site must be prepared for the owls. Ideally, we prefer to allow confined owls an entire building or silo in which to fly about. This is not always possible. Usually, we are at least able to allow the owls the freedom of an entire barn loft. We close all exits, using boards or olefin netting. We then line a 16-inch square nest box, with a six-inch diameter entrance hole, with two inches of wood chips, since Barn-owls are not known to construct nests. Next, we attach this box near the top of each structure in a place that is as nearly predator-proof as possible. In silos, we place the nest box approximately two-thirds of the height above the floor (Marti et al. 1979). We supply large stock tanks to the enclosures containing fledgling owls. Live mice released into these tanks allow young Barn-owls the opportunity to learn to catch their prey before release to the wild.
I. Placement
Barn-owls released in 1983 were placed as mated pairs, pairs with young, and groups of immature. We supplied cooperators with meat to feed the owls, and they fed the confined owls daily and monitored food consumption. Cooperators continued to feed the owls after their release until the birds were self-sufficient.
In 1983, we place 4 mated pairs (normally second-year owls) at release sites, prior to the main breeding season. In our captive Barn-owls, this has been from January through March. The hen from one pair appeared to be nesting in hay on the barn floor when she was not seen for several weeks. Since the paid did not nest successfully, and because cooperators could not fee the owls through the winter months, the pair was captured and returned to the WRS facilities prior to winter. A second pair remained captive for almost an entire year and just recently began courtship. Two captive pairs did nest after 2 months and 5 months, respectively, and fledged 5 young each. We released one of these pairs with young, but held captive the second pair with young over winter. Since these young fledged in late fall, we felt gentle release in early spring, rather than winter, would increase their survival chances. Normally, when the owlets fledge and catch live mice proficiently from the stock tank, it is time for gentle release. We open the structure so the occupants can hunt natural prey in the area near the release site. By allowing the owls to raise young at a site, we hope a bond will be established, so that either the nesting pair or their young will return to nest again in the future.
A second method of placement, which we feel is successful, is placing pairs with young. This method works well at sites where cooperators do not wish to feed captive owls daily for more than 2 or 3 months. During 1983, 5 Barn-owl pairs were placed with their 176, 3- to 4-week old young, which they hatched at the WRS.
Originally, we intended to allow parent owls freedom to hunt for natural prey outside the structure when the young are about one month old. Theoretically, the presence of the young will draw the adults back to the barn. Jane Ratcliffe (1979, cited by Bunn et al. 1982) of England, experienced good success using this method with Barn-owls. Unfortunately, the first time we tried this strategy, both adults vacated and did not return to feed their young. Our cooperator was then faced with the problem of feeding 5 very hungry owlets. It should be mentioned that we tried this method with a pair of Barn-owls and young that we moved to the site only several weeks before. With the remaining pairs, we used the same release techniques described for mated pairs – waiting until the young fledged before allowing freedom for the entire family unit. In 4 cases, this included foster young.
When the owlets of 4 family units were 6 to 8 weeks old, we added 8 more young of the same age to the broods, 2 owlets to each foster family. Four of these were WRS hatchlings, and 4 were from California. We experienced no problems with fostering young, as long as all young involved were nearly the same age.
Besides the Barn-owl family units, immature Barn-owls were also gently released. We held these owls captive at the release site for only 4 to 5 weeks. They were WRS fledglings and young owls received from California and Louisiana. To discourage inbreeding, we placed Barn-owls of different parentage at release sites of close proximity (40 miles). Volunteers hacked 4 immature owls at each of 4 sites.
In 1983, a total of 12 adult and 46 immature Common Barn-owls were banded with lock-on U.S. Fisheries and Wildlife Service leg bands and gently released. We hope this number of released owls is significant enough to have beneficial effects on the future Iowa wild breeding population. Our goals will be met when we know of at least 5 self-sustaining Barn-owl populations in Iowa habitats.
J. Follow-up
We feel it is important to monitor the Barn-owls, even after release. Post-release monitoring is presently conducted primarily by volunteer cooperators. We ask these cooperators to keep records of post-release activity, including feeding and artificial nest box use. To ensure released owls of other roost and nest sites, at least one other nest box is erected in a vacant or little-used structure within a one-mile radius of the release site. As many as 10 nest boxes have been constructed and put up by concerned citizens in any one release site area. During 1983, nearly 40 nest boxes were erected in release site vicinities. Because our Nongame staff lacks time and manpower to monitor every nest box placed, we do appreciate the release site cooperators, County Conservation Board members, and other ICC personnel who voluntarily monitor nest box use.
Since loss of suitable nest sites is a factor in the decline of the Common Barn-owl, the ICC is promoting the use of artificial nest structures to increase our wild population. In Utah, 30 nest boxes were used by 24 barn-owl pairs to produce 154 young in 2 years (Marti et ala. 1979). We make available to the public Barn-owl life history brochures which include nest box construction and erection instructions. Many citizens have already used these instructions to build and place nest boxes.
K. Media coverage
Media coverage at Barn-owl placement sites and about the Barn-owl restoration program has been instrumental in educating the public, as well as generating public support. Major Iowa newspaper and television stations have sent personnel to do stories at release sites with very short notice from us. Local newspaper coverage of releases has also been excellent. A number of radio stations have interviewed ICC personnel about the program. Such coverage has promoted statewide response from citizens who want to become involved with the Barn-owl restoration program. Undoubtedly it has also increased donations to the Nongame Iowa income tax refund Checkoff which funds our program.
FUTURE
Plans for 1984 include placement of 7 Barn-owl breeding pairs in January, several pairs with young in April, and approximately 20 fledglings during summer. Also, in 1984, we hope to place radio transmitters on 3 breeding pairs and 10 fledgling Barn-owls to monitor habitat use, early dispersal movements, and mortality. A graduate student from Iowa State University will be involved full time on this aspect of the program.
CONCLUSION
The success of Iowa’s Common Barn-owl restoration program is greatly dependent on public education and involvement. Much public interest has already been generated, and we need to channel this interest into involvement with building and erecting nest boxes, as well as monitoring these boxes for Barn-owl use.
It is also important that we cooperate with Barn-owl restoration projects in neighboring states such as Missouri and Nebraska. We can learn from each other’s failures and successes, and it is probably only a matter of time before a Barn-owl banded in Iowa shows up in a nest box in Missouri, or vice versa. Cooperation is certainly the key to this program’s success!
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I thank Iowa’s Nongame Biologist, D. A. Newhouse, who initiated the Barn-owl restoration program, and who provided assistance in the final draft of this manuscript. I extend special thanks to my wife, M. Ehresman for being the main editor of this paper as well as providing field assistance and constant moral support. I thank S. Monen for typing this manuscript and for her secretarial work related to the restoration project. I also thank L. Crim and R. Dietz for their field assistance and dedicated care of captive breeding owls. I am grateful to Dallas Center Hy-Line International, the National Animal Disease Center and Iowa State Diagnostic Laboratory, located in Ames, for contributing their excess chicks and mice to supplement our captive owl food source; and I thank R. Lindahl and G. Crim for providing laboratory mice delivery service. I am especially thankful to the following cooperators who provided release sites and/or captive owl care, and whose efforts made Barn-owl releases possible: B. and N. Bakehouse, R. and F. Cooper, C. and K. Froyen, L. and M. Hardin, I. Hardt, C. Hensley and Cass County Conservation Board staff, L. and C. Inman, H. Jensen, L. and N. Link, M. Moe, J. and B. Sabin, E. and M. Schlueter, and B. and J. Wilson. Also, a special thanks goes to R. Minthorn who contributed 10 nest boxes for owls released in Mills County. Finally, I wish to thank the people who have contributed to Iowa’s Nongame income tax refund Checkoff, which funds this project.
LITERATURE CITED
ANDREWS, R. D., J. L. HANSEN, and B. R. OHDE. 1982. Furbearer harvest survey. Iowa Conserv. Comm. Study no. 19.
BECKER, C. 1978. Endangered and threatened wildlife. Ill. Dept. Conserv. 1-4.
BUNN, D. S., A. B. WARBURTON, and R. D. S. WILSON. 1982. The Barn Owl. Vermillion, South Dakota, Buteo Books.
MARTI, C. D., P. W. Wagner, and K. W. DENNE. 1979. Nest boxes for the management of barn owls. Wildl. Soc. Bull. 7(3):145-148.
MC KEEVER, K. 1979. Care and rehabilitation of injured owls. Ontario, Canada, W. F. Rannie.
PETERSEN, L. R. 1979a. Ecology of Great Horned Owls and Red-tailed Hawks in Wisconsin. Wis. Dept. Nat. Resour. Tech. Bull 111:1-95.
_______. 1979b. Status of Barn Owls in Wisconsin. Wis. Dept. Nat. Res. Rep. 1097:1-11.
PIECHOCKI, R. 1960. Uber die winterverluste der schleiereule. (Tyto alba). Vogelwarte 20:274-280.
RATCLIFFE, E. J. 1979. Fly high, run free. London. Reference not available, cited from Bunn et al. (1982)
ROOSA, D. M. 1977. Endangered Iowa birds (an annotated list of endangered, threatened, extirpated or “status undetermined” birds of Iowa). Iowa Conserv. Comm. Spec. Rep. of Preserves Board, no. 4:1-25.
STEWART, P. A. 1952. Dispersal, breeding behavior, and longevity of banded Barn Owls in North America. Auk 69:227-45.
TAYLOR, S. M. 1978. Michigan’s endangered and threatened species program. Mich. Dept. Nat. Resour. 1-35.
WADDELL, W., and W. C. CRAWFORD, Jr., 1982. Barn Owl recovery program – Missouri and the Midwest. Pp. 74-80 in wildlife rehabilitation (P. Beaver, ed.). Smithtown, New York, Exposition Press, Inc.
WALKER, L. W. 1974. The book of owls. New York, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
WAYNE, A. T. 1924. A death trap to the American Barn Owl (Tyto pratincola). Auk 41(2):342.
[1] (Product of Central Nebraska Packing Company of North Platte. Mention of trade names does not imply endorsement by the ICC.)

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