Stygian owl
The Stygian owl is a medium-sized "typical owl" in subfamily Striginae. It is found in Mexico, parts of Central America, Cuba, Hispaniola, and 10 countries in South America.
Taxonomy and systematics
The Stygian owl has these six recognized subspecies:- A. s. lambi Moore, RT
- A. s. robustus Kelso, L
- A. s. siguapa d'Orbigny
- A. s. noctipetens Riley
- A. s. stygius Wagler
- A. s. barberoi Bertoni, AW
Description
The Stygian owl is long and weighs about. The sexes have similar very dark plumage. The face is blackish with a pale border and a whitish forehead, and the head has long dark feathers that project upward as "ears". The dark upperparts have buff streaks and bars; the underparts are a dingy buff with dark brown or blackish barring and streaks. The eye is shades of yellow, the bill blue-black to blackish, and the feet dark grayish or brownish pink. Its eyes may appear to be a shade of crimson under certain lighting due to their reflective nature. The subspecies are substantially alike, differing mostly in the shade of the upperparts' streaks and somewhat in size.Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of Stygian owl are found thus :- A. s. lambi, northwestern Mexico from Sonora and Chihuahua south to Jalisco
- A. s. robustus, discontinuously from Guerrero and Veracruz in Mexico south into northern Nicaragua
- A. s. siguapa, mainland Cuba and Isla de la Juventud
- A. s. noctipetens, mainland Hispaniola and Gonâve Island
- A. s. stygius, Colombia and Venezuela south to Bolivia and discontinuously in central and southern Brazil
- A. s. barberoi, Paraguay and northern Argentina
Some authors merge A. s. lambi into A. s. robustus. Some extend the range of robustus to include the Colombian, Ecuadorian, and Venezuelan populations otherwise attributed to A. s. stygius. Some include A. s. noctipetens in A. s. siguapa. And some include the population in southeastern Brazil in A. s. barberoi instead of in A. s. stygius.
The Stygian owl inhabits a wide variety of landscapes from sea level to of elevation. Most are fairly open rather than densely forested or purely grasslands. They include montane pine, pine-oak, and cloud forests, thorn scrub, cerrado, pine plantations, and even urban parks.