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GG3416 - Short-eared Owl

Asio flammeus
  • Female
  • Euring Age 5 - 2nd calendar year
  • Weight: 356g

GG3416 is a female Short-eared Owl tagged in October in Malta. It wintered in Malta until eventually migrating on the 26th of March. Amazingly she crossed the Agean flying night and day from the 26th until the afternoon of the 27th, avoiding landfall in Italy despite almost reaching mainland Italy's southernmost tip. Unfortunately it seems that the bird died in Ukraine on the 17th of April.

Project Information

Research on the Short-eared Owl population of Malta

The main objective of this project is to research the Short-eared Owl's population, an annex 1 species, that migrates through, winters and occasionally also breeds in Malta. Understanding how such sensitive, nocturnal predators make use of the archipelago for hunting, resting and breeding is important to better protect important areas from various pressures. Different aspects of the owls’ ecology will be studied, including: estimation and monitoring of the migratory and wintering population size through observation and scientific bird ringing, the use of different habitats and micro-habitats for hunting and roosting throughout seasons via the use of gps-tracking devices which will also reveal migration routes beyond Malta, wintering and breeding behaviour via the use of sound recording devices and trap cameras and diet studies via pellet collection and analysis. The first year of this project (Apr 2024 - Apr 2025) was funded by the Conservation of Wild Birds funding scheme 2023, administered by WBRU.

Milestones

20/10/2024 08:10 UTC
Tagging Location Obfuscated due to site/species sensitivity
26/03/2025 08:03 UTC
Start of Track
26/03/2025 11:03 UTC
Active Migration over sea
27/03/2025 05:03 UTC
Active Migration over sea
27/03/2025 11:03 UTC
Active Migration over sea
27/03/2025 05:03 UTC
Active Migration over land
27/03/2025 08:03 UTC
First landfall
06/05/2025 02:05 UTC

Telemetry Device Information

OrniTrack-E9 4G transmitter was fitted using a teflon backpack harness. The E (elevated solar panel) version of this tag weighs approx 10g, despite the name '9'. The panel's elevation helps in reducing the amount of feathers covering the panel and preventing charging.

Read more on Ornitela's page: https://www.ornitela.com/10g-transmitter

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