@anon6798@lemmy.world is singlehandedly keeping this place alive so I thought I’d also participate and share a photo I took last month. This is a burrowing owl I photographed on the grounds of a hotel in Brasilia. A couple of these guys made their burrow in a little hole hill at the bottom of the garden and were seemingly unbothered by hotel guests that were walking past. I have a couple of other shots but this is my favourite. Thanks for all your superb owl posts anon6789!

  • anon6789
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    1011 days ago

    I was looking at your photo a few times and kept noticing how brown the face looked compared to the photos I normally see of Burrowing Owls, so I looked for a guide to subspecies.

    It looks like one of the main subspecies of Brazil, A. c. grallaria, is known to have more brownish upper colorations. Here is the full description:

    A. c. grallaria (Temminck, 1822). Includes A. c. beckeri (Cory, 1915). Resident across arid central and eastern Brazil [type locality = Faxina, São Paulo, Brazil]. Fairly large (wing>168 mm); dorsum dark with rufous wash; scapular spots small; ventrum dark, with buff wash on belly; chest band spotted; ventral bars rusty.

    For the full guide, see here. It sounds like not much work has been done since many initial studies decades ago, but it’s a good starting point for seeing some of the regional distinctions.

    • @Foreigner@lemmy.worldOP
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      911 days ago

      Cool I did not know that, thank you for sharing! Brasilia is somewhat ‘central’ so this makes sense. Here’s a few more shots of the same couple.

      • anon6789
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        711 days ago

        I really like them with the tropical “tan.”

        That golden yellow/brown on the leading edge of the wing of the first one is extra flashy. Love it!