Tropical screech owl
The tropical screech owl is a small species of owl in the family Strigidae. It is found in Costa Rica, Panama, Trinidad, and every mainland South American country.
Taxonomy and systematics
The taxonomy of genus Megascops is somewhat unsettled. A 2015 publication proposed that the tropical screech owl's closest relatives are the white-throated screech owl and Koepcke's screech owl. However, the International Ornithological Committee has not accepted that assessment.The following nine subspecies are accepted by the IOC, the Clements taxonomy, and BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World. M. c. duidae perhaps represents a separate species.
- M. c. choliba Vieillot
- M. c. luctisomus Bangs & Pernard
- M. c. margaritae Cory
- M. c. cruciger Spix
- M. c. duidae Chapman
- M. c. decussatus Lichtenstein
- M. c. uruguaii Hekstra
- M. c. surutus Kelso
- M. c. wetmorei Brodkorb
Description
Distribution and habitat
The tropical screech owl is "the most common and widespread screech-owl of the neotropics." It is found from Costa Rica and Panama south and throughout South America, almost entirely east of the Andes, but not in the far south. The subspecies are distributed thus:- M. c. choliba, southern Mato Grosso and São Paulo, Brazil, south to eastern Paraguay
- M. c. luctisomus, the Pacific slope in Costa Rica south to the Canal Zone in Panama, and on the Pearl Islands
- M. c. margaritae, restricted to Margarita Island off of northern Venezuela
- M. c. cruciger, Trinidad, and eastern Colombia and Venezuela east to the Guianas and south to eastern Peru
- M. c. duidae, Cerro Duida and Cerro de la Neblina in southern Venezuela
- M. c. decussatus, central and southern Brazil
- M. c. uruguaii, southeastern Brazil, northeastern Argentina, and Uruguay
- M. c. surutus, Bolivia
- M. c. wetmorei, Paraguay and Argentina
M. c. duidae, it shuns the interior of forests; that subspecies is found in dense forest and bamboo scrub.
Behavior and ecology
Feeding
The tropical screech owl is nocturnal. It forages by sallying from a low perch to capture preyon the ground, from branches, or in the air. Its diet is large arthropods and small vertebrates. The former include earthworms, scorpions, spiders, harvestmen, and a large variety of insects. Vertebrate prey includes small frogs, other amphibians, small reptiles, other birds, opossums, bats, and rodents.