Despite habitat protection, Northern Spotted Owl population is declining

DN Bureau

A recent study found that the Northern Spotted Owl population in Washington's Mount Rainier National Park has declined sharply.

Representational image
Representational image


Washington D.C.: A recent study found that the Northern Spotted Owl population in Washington's Mount Rainier National Park  has declined sharply in the past two decades despite ensuring long-term preservation of habitat within the park.

The culprit? The spread of Barred Owls, a closely related, competing species that has moved into Spotted Owls' range from the east, according to the study published in the journal of The Condor: Ornithological Applications.

Also Read | Survey indicates tiger presence in Palamau Tiger Reserve

Biologists have seen Barred Owls in Spotted Owl territories within the national park more and more frequently since Spotted Owl surveys began in 1997. For their new study, Oregon Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit's Anna Mangan, the National Park Service's Tara Chestnut, and their colleagues analysed two decades' worth of data from these surveys. 

What is particularly alarming is that this decline has occurred even at Mount Rainier, where Spotted Owl habitat has been protected for over 100 years, with virtually no fire or logging disturbance. With Barred Owls detected at nearly every Spotted Owl territory monitored in the park, the future of Spotted Owls at Mount Rainier is tenuous. It also suggests that preserving owl habitat, while still crucial, is likely no longer enough to sustain the Spotted Owl population at Mount Rainier," said, Oregon Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit's researcher, Anna Mangan.

Also Read: Dynamite News UPSC Conclave 2019: Know from IAS Toppers ‘How to crack Civil Services Exam

Also Read | 9 children dead as school van falls into gorge

If current trends continue, scientists predict that the Spotted Owl could be extinct in the region within approximately six to eight decades. "Conservation managers can focus on protecting old-growth habitat with steeper slopes, as we found this to have higher Spotted Owl occupancy, and can continue to monitor Barred Owl populations to better understand their effect on local Spotted Owl populations. Managers will need to consider some creative solutions, and likely some unpopular choices if the Northern Spotted Owl is going to be prevented from going extinct on public lands," added Mangan. (ANI)










Related Stories