Snowy migration is a bit irregular. They don’t even always do it every year. Sometimes they’ll go to/from the same place, but not always. They’re nomads and just kind of follow food around.
They get studied a good bit, including by Project SNOWstorm, which tracks Snowies specifically. Lots of work is being done to find out who goes where, when, and why.
Owls are really fun because they’re an animal we feel we should know a lot about (who doesn’t know what at least 1 owl looks like?), but since they hate people, try to be invisible, live in hard to get places, and mainly travel at night by flying, they’ve been really hard to track and study historically, so there is still so much we have to learn about them compared to many animals we’re familiar with. More taditional methods like banding are still a great source of info, but now we have better cameras, drones, gps, night vision, and computers. Even things like BirdNET Pi can help find these invisible but vocal animals. It’s a great time to be an owl fan!
Snowy migration is a bit irregular. They don’t even always do it every year. Sometimes they’ll go to/from the same place, but not always. They’re nomads and just kind of follow food around.
They get studied a good bit, including by Project SNOWstorm, which tracks Snowies specifically. Lots of work is being done to find out who goes where, when, and why.
Owls are really fun because they’re an animal we feel we should know a lot about (who doesn’t know what at least 1 owl looks like?), but since they hate people, try to be invisible, live in hard to get places, and mainly travel at night by flying, they’ve been really hard to track and study historically, so there is still so much we have to learn about them compared to many animals we’re familiar with. More taditional methods like banding are still a great source of info, but now we have better cameras, drones, gps, night vision, and computers. Even things like BirdNET Pi can help find these invisible but vocal animals. It’s a great time to be an owl fan!