Hi everyone,


The International Owl Center is hosting four webinars in January and February 
for their Virtual Owl Expert Speaker series. These webinars are free for 
everyone to watch. Webinars are about one hour long, with up to one more hour 
for questions. Register to get the Zoom link to join and ask questions, or they 
will be concurrently streamed to the Owl Center’s YouTube channel.



January 18: Barred Owls eat everything while Spotted Owls lose ground: a 
genetic perspective on Anthropocene landscapes by Dr. Emily Fountain and Dr. 
Daniela Arenas

Emily Fountain and Daniela Arenas are scientists at the University of Wisconsin 
– Madison who use genomics to inform the conservation of Spotted Owls and 
ecological communities in California, United States. Their talk will address 
the role of human modified landscapes in the decline of California and Northern 
Spotted Owls, including but not limited to, the invasion of Barred Owls into 
the western United States. They will discuss their genetic research on the 
declining California Spotted Owl in Southern California, as well as the 
molecular assessment and ecological impacts of the diet of Barred Owls in the 
Pacific Northwest.





January 25: Managing Barred Owls to save the Spotted Owl: a longstanding 
Conservation Tool with Janice Reid

Janice Reid, a longtime Northern Spotted Owl researcher, will speak about 
Barred Owl management and its role in addressing the ongoing decline of Spotted 
Owl populations in the western United States. Reid spent more than 30 years 
studying Northern Spotted Owls in western Oregon with the Pacific Northwest 
Research Station and brings deep field experience to this complex and often 
controversial topic.

Her talk will place current Barred Owl control efforts in a broader 
conservation context, emphasizing that the use of lethal management to protect 
vulnerable species is not a new or unprecedented tool. Reid will discuss why 
Barred Owl management has generated heightened public controversy compared to 
other species control programs, and what the science tells us about 
competition, habitat, and the future of the Northern Spotted Owl.





February 1: One nest box at a time: bringing Barn Owls and kestrels back to 
Maryland’s working landscapes with Andy Brown and Alex Pellegrini

​Andy Brown and Alex Pellegrini from the Maryland Bird Conservation 
Partnership’s Farmland Raptor Program will discuss their efforts to bring 
American Barn Owls back to Maryland’s working landscapes. Through nest box 
installation, systematic monitoring, and targeted field research, they are 
building a clearer picture of what these owls need to persist in working 
landscapes. The talk will highlight insights gained from nest box programs, 
methods for safely capturing and banding adult American Barn Owls, and how 
these data inform our understanding of survival, movement, and breeding ecology.
You can make a donation to support this project by clicking here 
<https://marylandbirds.org/donate> . Please indicate in the comment section 
that your donation is for the Farmland Raptor Program.





February 8: Where the owls go: methods and insights from Short-eared Owl 
research in Maryland with Andy Brown and Alex Pellegrini

Andy Brown and Alex Pellegrini from the Maryland Bird Conservation 
Partnership’s Farmland Raptor Program will present their ongoing research on 
Short-eared Owls in Maryland, focused on understanding winter habitat use, 
movement, and behavior in fragmented agricultural and grassland landscapes. 
Their work aims to address key knowledge gaps for a species that remains 
difficult to study and conserve. The talk will highlight preliminary insights, 
methodological challenges, and opportunities for collaboration to better 
understand and protect Short-eared Owls in the Mid-Atlantic United States.



Go to https://www.internationalowlcenter.org/virtualexpert.html for more 
information and to register for the webinars.







Karla Bloem

Houston, MN

[email protected]





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