Calling all birdwatchers: Rare snowy owl 'irruption' grips Toronto - Action News
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Calling all birdwatchers: Rare snowy owl 'irruption' grips Toronto

Snowy owls are wintering in Toronto in huge numbers for the first time in five years.

Invasion of the predatory birds from the north could be linked to successful breeding season or food shortage

Huge numbers of snowy owls are wintering in southern Ontario this year in what experts call an 'irruption.' (Jon Castell/CBC)

Bird watchers steady your binoculars.

A rare snowy owl invasion is gripping Toronto for the first time since 2013.

"It's not every year we get a healthy population of snowy owls," said Lee Earl, program specialist for Don River Valley Park.

Earl leads "owl prowls" in the east-end parkand saysbird watchers are spotting "snowies" in hugenumbers this winter.

"It's a really exciting time of year when we get to see these visitors," she said.

The sudden population boom and southern migration of snowy owlsin record numbers is called an "irruption," says Karen McDonald, manager of restoration projects for the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority.

She explains irruptions are a "very unpredictable" phenomenon and often align with booms in prey.

"We don't fully understand why snowy owls irupt year-over-year, but more informationis pointing to the fact that food abundance results in larger clutch sizes," McDonald said, noting thatsnowy owls typically lay three or four eggs, but this past breeding season nests contained eight or nine eggs.

'Snowies' are one of the largest owls. They have a wing span between 125 and 150 centimetres. (Submitted by Ramin Izadpanah)

The largest invasion of snowy owls ever recorded in southern Ontario happened fiveyears ago.

During this winter, the predatory bird was even seen as far south as Florida and the Caribbean Islands. "This is pretty unusual," McDonald said.

Similar numbers are expected this year, according to Kevin Kerr, curator of birds and invertebrates at the Toronto Zoo.

"We see them down here, further south, in small numbers each year, but every few years, in an irruption year, we see great numbers of them showing up ... sometimes well beyond their normal range," Kerr toldCBCToronto, adding this typically happens every four to five years.

He explains Toronto is a "fairly natural stopping point" for snowy owls looking for new territory to hunt because it's at "the southern end of their normal range."

One of the largest species of owl

Snowy owlstypically weigh between 1.6 to 3 kilograms and areone of the largest species of owl.

They live in northern Canadaduring the summer where they feed on lemmings, a mouse-like rodent found in Arctic regions.

Lemmings have a "cyclical population," meaning their numbers "will spike and then crash," says McDonald, and biologists believe this has a direct impact on the population of snowy owls.

A brown lemming sits in the sun last summer on Bylot Island.
Snowy owls feed on lemmings in the north. The small rodent is affected by climate change because increasing freeze-thaw cycles in the fall season mean it can't get to seeds or roots buried by ice. (Submitted by Mathilde Poirier)

The northernbird heads south in search of food during the winter months between late October and early March.

"The thought is that these animals are probably starving up on their normal breeding grounds and so they'd head down further south looking for food," said Kerr, noting this typically consists of small rodents or waterfowl in the area of the Great Lakes.

Where to see snowy owls

Don't look for these owls in the forest, says Kerr they stick to tundra-like areas in the city, such as large fields or airports, where there arelots of rodents they can feast on.

"It might look like a winter wonderland," he said.

"If you're a snowy owl you're looking for something that feels like home. Think flat terrain or a rocky coastline."

Bird watchers canspot them in places likeTommy Thompson Park, Don River Valley Park, Downsview Park and Pearson International Airport.

The best places to spot this visitor are in large open spaces where they can easily hunt rodents. (Eric Foss/CBC)