Dietary Relationships of the Barn Owl and Australian Kestrel on Islands Off the Coast of Western Australia
Emu
91(2) 69 - 72
Published: 1991
Abstract
The diets of sympatric Barn Owls Tyro alba and Australian Kestrels Falco cenchroides on islands off the coast of Western Australia were studied by pellet analysis. House Mice Mus domesticus comprised the bulk of the diet of the Barn Owl (83% by volume), with other species of small mammals and birds constituting most of the remainder of the diet. In contrast, reptiles and insects were the major prey categories in the diet of the Australian Kestrel (38% and 39%, respectively, by volume), with small mammals and birds constituting 23%. The dietary differences between the two species reflect the diurnal hunting activity of the Australian Kestrel and nocturnal hunting, especially for mice, in the Barn Owl.
https://doi.org/10.1071/MU9910069
© Royal Australian Ornithologists Union 1991