WASSINK G & W HINGMANN (2010) Year-round diet of Eagle Owl Bubo bubo in The Netherlands and adjacent Germany. LIMOSA 83 (3): 97-108.
From June 2002 until December 2009, prey remains and
pellets of Eagle Owls Bubo bubo were collected in nine
territories in the Netherlands (provinces of Gelderland
and Limburg) and 37 territories in Western Germany, just
across the Dutch border. Five territories were monitored
year-round. In total 4918 prey were identified (Tables 1
and 3).
Woodpigeons Columba palumbus were the main prey
in this study (37% of all prey; Tables 2 and 3), especially in
the winter (81% in January; Fig. 10) when large numbers
of Woodpigeons are present in the study area. In the
summer, when fewer Woodpigeons are present, prey like
Hedgehog Erinaceus europaeus, Brown Rat Rattus
norvegicus, Rabbit Cryctolagus curiculus, and crows
Corvus sp. are important. Homing Pigeons Columba liva
seem to replace Woodpigeons during the summer in the
Eagle Owl diet, although the importance of Homing
Pigeons might have been overestimated in this study as
one individual Eagle Owl specialised on this prey species
(this male took 68% of all Homing Pigeons included in
this study).
In the Netherlands and Western Germany pigeons
formed a much larger proportion of the diet of Eagle
Owls than elsewhere in Europe, even when excluding
Homing Pigeons (Table 4). In our study Eagle Owls seldom
preyed on mice, whereas in Europe mice comprise
about 30% of the diet by number. This is possibly caused
by a superabundance of other prey in our study area (especially
pigeons). Also relatively few Rabbits were eaten
in our study, which could be explained by low Rabbit
densities due to the rabbit viral haemorrhagic disease.
The large share in the diet of the most important prey
species, and the scarcity of mice and raptors and other
owls suggest that Eagle Owls in the Netherlands and
Western Germany enjoy an abundance of food, and
hence a further increase of their population is to be expected.
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