footer_shadow

Unravelling the mystery of the Omani Owl

Omani Owl Strix butleri, Al Hajar mountains, Oman, 2 March 2015. (© Magnus Robb, Alyn Walsh & The Sound Approach)

Discovered in 2013 by Magnus Robb and the Sound Approach and confirmed using sound analysis, Omani Owl has created a stir among both birders and biologists. That a bird around the size of a Barn Owl Tyto alba had evaded discovery was extraordinary. That it was described and named only using sound recordings and photographs was controversial.

When a rival group of researchers re-examined museum specimens of the closely related Strix butleri, they suspected that its type specimen was in fact an Omani Owl. All the other specimens were different enough, especially when their genes were analysed, to be described as a new species, Strix hadorami. However, the study did not examine DNA of Omani Owl.

In a newly published pager, Magnus Robb and his colleagues returned to the mountains of Oman where they captured and released an Omani Owl. Feathers and blood from the owl corroborated both teams’ findings that there are two different Strix species in the Middle East. DNA analysis shows that Omani Owl is the same as Strix butleri, and the other species is the recently named but much better known Desert Owl S hadorami (previously ‘Hume’s Owl’).

Map showing the known distribution of Strix hadorami (green) and S. butleri (black). Symbols indicate the type localities of ‘S. omanensis’ (circle) and S. butleri (square), and the new record in NE Iran (triangle). The question mark denotes a hearing record of S. butleri in Wadi Wurayah National Park, United Arab Emirates, which requires substantiation.

So when Magnus heard unknown sounds of an owl in March 2013, he was in fact rediscovering a species previously known from just one tatty old specimen in The Natural History Museum (Tring, England) said to be from Pakistan, and collected 135 years earlier.

Photographs of (a, b) Strix butleri captured at the type locality of ‘Strix omanensis’, Al Hajar range, Oman, 2 March 2015 (© Magnus S. Robb & Alyn J. Walsh) and (c, d) Strix butleri after release, Mashhad, Iran, 23 January 2015 (© Seyed Babak Musavi).

The new paper also examines DNA from a mystery owl discovered in Mashhad, northeastern Iran in January 2015. Babak Musavi and Ali Khani took four feathers for DNA analysis, which the team showed was also of an Omani Owl, the first confirmation that it still exists outside the Arabian peninsula and 1300 km from the nearest record of this species.

The full paper can be read here biorxiv.org/content/early/2015/08/20/025122

 

Magnus Robb & The Sound Approach
25 August 2015

 

 

 

 

freetrial-badge

 

Listen to our free fortnightly podcast now

The Sound Approach Series

 

 

 

 

Latest article3

article_thumb

Weekly birding round-up: 20 - 26 June 2025

Jon Dunn brings you his weekly birding roundup looking back at the best birds from around Britain, Ireland and the Western Palearctic. More here >

article_thumb

Study reveals why the early bird sings early

New research finds that territorial behaviour and diet help explain why some birds sing more often at dawn, challenging traditional theories about dawn choruses. More here >

article_thumb

Tweeting for Science: Can Social Media Help Monitor Raptor Diets?

A new study investigates whether online photos of bird meals can complement fieldwork in understanding raptor feeding habits. More here >