"Strix varia Study: Appearance, Place, Habitat, Diet, Breeding and Management Plan" Prohibited owls (Strix varia) are the most common in the southeastern Ohio area, but the North American area is vast. Strix varia is a big round forest owl with a grayish white face plate. Feather is grayish brown, white spots on the back, white striped pattern in the abdomen, and white stripes in the neck and chest. You can derive from those names. It is brown eyes, yellow enamel, long tail, and ears are not felt (Quimby, 2000).
Snowy Owl was originally one of many birds described by Rinneus in the symbolic 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae, where the binary name Strix scandiaca was given. The name of Bubo in the groin is the Latin word of Eurasia eagle owl, Scandiaca is the new Latin of Scandinavia. Until recently, snowy owls were considered to be the sole members of the only genus such as Nyctea scandiaca, but the mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data (Olsen et al. 2002) showed that it was the oblique flow of Bubo genus We showed that it is very closely related. However, some authorities are discussing this classification, but still like Nyctea.
Explanation: In the last century, the eastern striped owl entered the west coast and is now considered a threat to the northern owl which is in danger of extinction. Striped owls have been reported as intense competitors, active territory holders, faster replicas, and even more speckled owls. Jack describes the natural history and protection of the two species and the coordination of the disputes caused by various regulatory authorities. Jack Dumbacher is a bird and mammalian curator of the California Academy of Sciences, a professor of biology at San Francisco State University. He has worked at California Shima Owl from 2006.