NPSpecies

Information on Species in National Parks

NPSpecies-1.9.3.24963-20240824-030002

National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior

Natural Resource Stewardship and Science
arrowhead
  • Home
    • IRMA Portal
  • Search
    • Get a Park Species List
    • Find Parks Where a Species is Found
    • Advanced Search
  • Parks
  • Reports
  • Add-Edit
    • Make a Suggestion
Contact Us  Help 
[ Log On ] User Roles
Print
Scientific Name
Otus flammeolus
Scientific Name w/ Auth.
Otus flammeolus (Kaup, 1852)
Park
Grand Canyon National Park (GRCA)
Sensitive
No
Park Accepted
Accepted
Record Status
Approved
Park Preferred Common Names
Flammulated Owl
Park Synonyms
Taxonomic Hierarchy
KingdomAnimalia
SubkingdomBilateria
Infrakingdom Deuterostomia
PhylumChordata
SubphylumVertebrata
Infraphylum Gnathostomata
SuperclassTetrapoda
ClassAves
OrderStrigiformes
FamilyStrigidae
SubfamilyStriginae
GenusPsiloscops
SpeciesOtus flammeolus
Occurrence
Present
Occurrence Notes
A fairly common summer resident of ponderosa pine and mixed conifer forests throughout the region. Spring migrants have been recorded three times along the Colorado River (5 May to 14 May), and late fall migrants were reported near Desert View on 11 Oct 1963, and on the South Bass Trail at the top of the Redwall on 25 Oct 1999 (Lawrence E. Stevens). Data source: Gatlin, BP. 2011. Annotated Checklist of the Birds of the Grand Canyon Region. 3rd edition.
Nativeness
Native
Abundance
Common
Seasonality Tags
  • Breeder
Geographic Regions Tags
  • South Rim
  • Inner Canyon
Threatened Endangered Status
State Species of Concern statuses
Ozone Sensitive Status
NatureServe GRank
NatureServe SRank
Observations
0
References
4
Vouchers
6
External Links
0
Evidence counts shown include evidence for related synonyms.
Created By
SLS - I&M Office
Created Date
7/24/2001 12:00:00 AM
Last Modified By
mterwilliger@nps.gov
Last Modified Date
9/1/2016 12:58:37 PM
Notes
(Otus flammeolus) * Flammulated Owl is a fairly common summer resident of ponderosa pine and mixed conifer forests throughout the region. Spring migrants have been recorded three times along the Colorado River (5 May to 14 May), and late fall migrants were reported near Desert View on 11 Oct 1963, and on the South Bass Trail at the top of the Redwall on 25 Oct 1999 (Lawrence E. Stevens). Data source: Gatlin, BP. 2011. Annotated Checklist of the Birds of the Grand Canyon Region. 3rd edition.
Other Parks
Bandelier National Monument (BAND)
Big Bend National Park (BIBE)
Cabrillo National Monument (CABR)
Canyon De Chelly National Monument (CACH)
Carlsbad Caverns National Park (CAVE)
Chiricahua National Monument (CHIR)
Channel Islands National Park (CHIS)
Coronado National Memorial (CORO)
John Day Fossil Beds National Monument (JODA)
Navajo National Monument (NAVA)
El Morro National Monument (ELMO)
Mesa Verde National Park (MEVE)
Lava Beds National Monument (LABE)
Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks (SEKI)
Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument (FLFO)
Guadalupe Mountains National Park (GUMO)
Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument (GICL)
Great Basin National Park (GRBA)
Saguaro National Park (SAGU)
Mojave National Preserve (MOJA)
Lake Mead National Recreation Area (LAKE)
El Malpais National Monument (ELMA)
Crater Lake National Park (CRLA)
Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve (GRSA)
Rocky Mountain National Park (ROMO)
Parashant National Monument (PARA)
Walnut Canyon National Monument (WACA)
Yosemite National Park (YOSE)
Whiskeytown National Recreation Area (WHIS)
Valles Caldera National Preserve (VALL)
US Department of the Interior  FOIA  Privacy Policy  Disclaimer and Ownership  NPS Home  USA.gov  Accessibility  Experience Your America TM
Tracing...