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This section shows one large critter image at a time. Use the thumbnails that follow to select a specific image to display here.
This gallery contains a grid of small thumbnails. Selecting a thumbnail will change the main image in the preceding section. Adults are seven to eight inches tall with a fifteen to twenty-inch wingspan. Females are distinguished from males by their larger size. Their chest is white with brown specks and their backs are brown with white specks.
Both juveniles and adults have bright yellow eyes. Saw-whet owls are completely nocturnal hunters. They most commonly feed on rodents but they will also eat insects, amphibians and small birds.
Saw-whet owls in coastal areas will also eat crustaceans. Like many owls, saw-whet owls are able to fly almost silently due to their fringed feathers that help air pass through without sound. This adaptation helps owls attack prey without warning.
Saw-whet owls will call for hours during the spring mating season. This call can be heard up to a half-mile away and nearby males will respond with a lower-pitched version of the song. Saw-whet owls also make whines and squawking noises and will snap their beak when they feel threatened. Males and females will sing to each other when courting in the spring. Saw-whet owls do not build nests but use tree cavities as nesting sites. They prefer to use abandoned woodpecker nests. They compete with boreal owls, starlings and squirrels for their nesting sites and their nests are sometimes destroyed by these competitors.