Spectacled owl

Pulsatrix perspicillata

The spectacled owl is a large bird of prey that can measure up to 50 cm in length with a wingspan of nearly a metre. It lives in a range of habitats in Central and South America, from tropical rainforests to savannahs with scarce tree cover between sea level and 1,600 metres in altitude.
It is a nocturnal hunter that feeds on small mammals, birds, insects, frogs and crabs, which it catches by stalking.

Natural habit

Woods and forests from southern Mexico to northern Argentina

Spectacled owl
  • Distribution / Resident
  • Breeding
  • Wintering
  • Subspecies

Risk level

  • Extint
  • Extint in the wild
  • Critically endangered
  • In Danger
  • Vulnerable
  • Near threatened
  • Minor concern
  • Insufficient data
  • Not evaluated
Least Concern

Taxonomy

Class
Aves
Order
Strigiformes
Family
Strigidae

Physical characteristics

500-900 g
Birth Weight:
50 cm
Up to 30 years

Biology

Habitat
Forest
Social life
Solitary
Feeding
Scavenger

Reproduction

Gestation
30-35
Days
Baby
1 to 2

Discover how they are

Biology

Description

The spectacled owl is a large bird of prey, which can be up to 50 cm long with a wingspan of almost one metre. It is characterised by its coffee colour, cream breast and belly, and its white feathers on its eyebrows and above its beak, creating a type of glasses around its eyes.

Habitat

The spectacled owl is a large bird of prey, which can be up to 50 cm long with a wingspan of almost one metre. It is characterised by its coffee colour, cream breast and belly, and its white feathers on its eyebrows and above its beak, creating a type of glasses around its eyes.

Feeding

This nocturnal hunter feeds on small mammals, birds, insects, frogs and crabs, captured by perching on a branch and swooping down.

Reproduction

Its breeding season starts between April and June, until the end of the dry, and beginning of wet, season. It builds its nest in holes in trees, sometimes stolen from other species such as woodpeckers and toucans, in which it lays two eggs that are incubated for five weeks.

Conduct

Resident and sedentary.

Status and conservation programs

Despite not being endangered, and considered quite common in the majority of its distribution area, the destruction of its habitat from deforestation and the degradation of wooded habitats have led to it starting to have difficulties and negative outcomes for breeding and numbers.