the guide to discoveries of an owl pellet

12
The Guide to Discoveries of an Owl Pellet By : Sophia Pereira Period: 9 Code: 15

Upload: jewell

Post on 23-Feb-2016

30 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The Guide to Discoveries of an Owl Pellet. By : Sophia Pereira Period: 9 Code: 15. Contents: . Introduction slide 3 Materials slide 4 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

The Guide to Discoveries

of an Owl Pellet

By : Sophia PereiraPeriod: 9Code: 15

Page 2: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

Contents: Introduction slide 3Materials slide 4Procedure slide 5Example slide 6Prey Pictures slide 7Data Tables slide 8Bar Graphs slide 9 & Slide 10 Owl Food Web slide 11Conclusion slide 12

Page 3: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

INTRODUCTION An owl pellet is one of the most fascinating things

about an owl. In this adventure we will investigate an owl pellet. The owl pellet we will be using comes from a barn owl. Barn owls have thick feathers to absorb any sound for a silent flight. They can turn their head 270° since they can’t move their eyes in their sockets and owls are nocturnal. Owls are carnivores, they use their keen sense of sight to find prey in the dark. They have an acute sense of hearing which also helps in finding meals. Owls are stealth hunters, they can easily sneak up on their prey with their sharp talons.

Owl pellets are masses of bone, teeth, hair, feathers and exoskeletons of various animals preyed upon by raptors, or birds of prey. Since owl do not have any teeth, they eat their pray whole or by pieces. After an owl swallows its meal, it travels down the esophagus, then through the proventriculus, and finally into the gizzard. In the gizzard, the meal is separated. The parts that are not digestible go in the pellet. After the pellet is formed, the owl regurgitates the pellet.

Page 4: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

Materials

Owl Pellet Toothpick or Tweezers Sheet of paper

Page 5: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

PROCEDURE1. Split the owl pellet into two

pieces over a sheet of paper2. Take half of the owl pellet and

thoroughly search the pellet for bones (you may use tweezers or a toothpick)

3. Split the bones from the hair, fur, and feathers

4. Take the other half of the pellet and follow steps 2 & 3 again

5. Once done, define what and how much prey you have

6. Finally, fill in the data tables

Page 6: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

Example

In this pellet, there were four voles. You can distinguish a vole by their teeth. Voles have two enormous front teeth and then a gap between the rest of the teeth.

Page 7: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

A Vole

Page 8: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

Prey animal found Number of each Non-prey items found

A Vole 4None- -

- -

--

Animal Vole Pocket Gopher

Mouse Shrew Rat Bird Mole Total

# found 54 3 2 - - - - 59Percent 92% 5% 3% 0% 0% 0% 0% 100%

Prey Animals per pellet

1 2 3 4 5 6 ≥7Total #

of pellets in class

Total # prey animals in

class

#students w/ea amt. of prey animal

0 8 6 5 1 0 0 20 59

Percent 0% 40% 30% 25% 5% 0% 0%100%

Average number of prey animals per pellet (mean)

Number of prey animals contained by most pellets (mode)

Lowest to highest number of prey animals in one pellet (range)

3 2 and 3 1-5

Data Tables

1 pe

llet

Cla

ss r

oom

of

pel

lets

Cla

ss r

oom

of

pelle

tsW

hole

6th

grad

e

Page 9: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

1 2 3 4 5 6 >70123456789

Number of Pray Animals per Pellet

Prey Animals per Pellet

#stu

dent

s w/e

a am

t. of

pre

y an

imal

Page 10: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

vole

pocke

t gop

her

mouse

shrew rat bir

dmole

0102030405060

Types of Prey Animals found in Owl Pellets

# fo

und

Type of Animal

Page 11: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet
Page 12: The Guide to Discoveries  of an Owl Pellet

Conclusion

Owl pellet with four voles inside.

Scientists study owl pellets to learn about what an owl eats, how it eats it, where it lives, and there diet patterns. With the information on slide 8, a barn owl will consume about 14 animals a week which is about 728 animals on a year. The most common animal found in a pellet is a vole. So, an owl will live in an environment full of voles or an environment fit for voles. We also know that owls eat the whole animal because an owl pellet is produced. In conclusion, there are million things to discover about an owl pellet.