The Spotted Owl's New Nemesis
An epic battle between environmentalists and loggers left much of the spotted owl's habitat protected. Now the celebrity species faces a new threat—a tougher owl
- By Craig Welch
- Photographs by Gary Braasch
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2009, Subscribe
Eric Forsman tramped across the spongy ground with one ear tipped to the tangled branches above. We were circling an isolated Douglas fir and cedar stand near Mary's Peak, the highest point in Oregon's Coast Range, scouring the trees for a puff of tobacco-hued feathers. I had come to see one of the planet's most-studied birds—the Northern spotted owl—with the man who brought the animal to the world's attention.
Forsman stopped. "You hear it?" he asked. I didn't. Above the twitter of winter wrens I caught only the plunk of a creek running through hollow logs. Then Forsman nodded at a scraggly hemlock. Twenty feet off the ground, a cantaloupe-size spotted owl stared back at us. "It's the male," he whispered.
Before I could speak, Forsman was gone. The 61-year-old U.S. Forest Service biologist zipped down one fern-slippery hill and up another. For years, he'd explained, this bird and its mate pumped out babies like fertile field mice, producing more offspring than other spotted owls in the range. Forsman wanted to reach their nest to see if this year's eggs had hatched—and survived.
Every chick counts, because spotted owls are vanishing faster than ever. Nearly 20 years after Forsman's research helped the federal government boot loggers off millions of acres to save the threatened owls, nature has thrown the birds a curveball. A bigger, meaner bird—the barred owl—now drives spotted owls from their turf. Some scientists and wildlife managers have called for arming crews with decoys, shotguns and recorded bird songs in an experimental effort to lure barred owls from the trees and kill them.
To Forsman and other biologists, the bizarre turn is not a refutation of past decisions but a sign of the volatility to come for endangered species in an increasingly erratic world. As climate chaos disrupts migration patterns, wind, weather, vegetation and river flows, unexpected conflicts will arise between species, confounding efforts to halt or slow extinctions. If the spotted owl is any guide, such conflicts could come on quickly, upend the way we save rare plants and animals, and create pressure to act before the science is clear. For spotted owls "we kind of put the blinders on and tried to only manage habitat, hoping things wouldn't get worse," Forsman said. "But over time the barred owl's influence became impossible to ignore."
When I finally hauled myself up to Forsman, yanking on roots for balance, I found him squatting on the ground looking at the curious female spotted owl. The bird, perched unblinking on a low branch not ten feet away, hooted a rising scale as if whistling through a slide flute. Her partner fluttered in and landed on a nearby branch.
Both creatures stared intently at Forsman, who absently picked at a clump of fur and rodent bones—an owl pellet regurgitated by one of the birds. Moments later the female launched herself to a tree crevice some 40 feet off the ground. Her head bobbed as she picked at her nest. Over the next hour, we looked through binoculars hoping to spy a chick.
It was here, not half a mile away, above a trickle of runoff called Greasy Creek, that Forsman saw his first spotted owl nest in 1970. He had grown up chasing great horned owls in the woods outside an old strawberry farm near Eugene, and as an undergraduate at Oregon State University he prowled the forests in search of rare breeds. One day he shimmied up a tree and poked his head inside a crack. He escaped with brutal talon marks on his cheek and one of the earliest recorded glimpses of a spotted owl nest. He also scooped up a sick chick—its eyes were crusted shut—planning to nurse it back to health and return it to its nest. When he came back, though, the adult birds had vanished, so Forsman raised the baby bird himself. It lived in a cage outside his home for 31 years.
Drawn by the romance of this obscure creature that hides in dark woods, Forsman became a spotted owl expert. He was the first to note that the birds nest primarily in the cavities of ancient trees or in the broken-limbed canopies of old-growth forests, where they feast on wood rats, red tree voles, flying squirrels and deer mice. Logging of the Pacific Northwest's conifers accelerated during the post-World War II housing boom and continued afterward. Forsman and a colleague, biologist Richard Reynolds, warned Congress and the U.S. Forest Service that shrinking forests threatened the owl's existence. They sent one of their first letters, to then-Senator Bob Packwood of Oregon, in 1973.
The owl population crash finally began in the 1980s, about the time the environmental movement was finding its footing. In an effort to save what remained of the old-growth forests the birds needed to survive, radical environmentalists pounded steel or ceramic spikes into firs, which threatened to destroy chain saws and mill blades. They donned tree costumes to attract attention to their cause and crawled into tree platforms to disrupt logging. Counter-protests erupted. In angry mill towns, café owners provocatively served "spotted owl soup" and shops sold T-shirts and bumper stickers ("Save a Logger, Eat an Owl"). There were lawsuits, and, in 1990, the Northern subspecies of spotted owl came under the Endangered Species Act (two subspecies in other parts of the country were not affected). A sweeping federal court ruling in 1991 closed much of the Northwest woods to logging. By the end of the century, timber harvest on 24 million acres of federal land had dropped 90 percent from its heyday. The spotted owl crystallized the power of the species-protection law. No threatened animal has done more to change how we use land.
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Related topics: Owls Hunting Environmental Preservation Oregon Forests
Additional Sources
A Conservation Strategy for the Northern Spotted Owl: Report of the Interagency Scientific Committee To Address the Conservation of the Northern Spotted Owl, published by the USDA Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, National Park Service, 1990









Comments (18)
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How simple minded is this journalism? Almost entirely ignoring the main issue of habitat loss (federal forests are only one third of the radically altered forest habitat in the PNW), and instead taking the easy path to focus the story on the bad guy (barred owls) and good guys (spotted owls). Historic clearcutting of old growth forests, and now, short term rotation of second growth forests, are the clear culprit. It's the logging management system that's the problem -- extraction/conversion -- not the barred owl. C'mon, use proper science for your articles!!
Posted by Shawn Cardinall on January 29,2013 | 10:04 PM
Spotted Owls and Barred Owls are in fact the same biological species. They are two races of the same species, separated by the continental ice sheet during the last glacial maximum only 15,000 years ago. What has happened since is that the Barred Owl has reclaimed much of its previous territory across southern Canada, and is now merging once again with its relict western race. This kind of thing happens all the time with many different biological species, whereby geographically isolated races form for a while but do not differentiate to the point where interbreeding with other races is no longer possible. Honestly, some of these wildlife management people (who are not necessarily scientists by any means) act like they are 'creationists' who believe that each 'species' is a concise and immutable created entity. This is just nonsense. There is genetic variation in each of the eastern and western gene pools of this species, and as these merge the genetic variation within the entire population will increase. It's evolution in action- live with it. Species are not static clones of one type.
Posted by Dr. David E. Hill on June 12,2012 | 12:24 AM
Oh yes, how "wise" they were in the management of Yellowstone - and they sure made a mess of that, didn't they? (see Michael Crichton's videos for a thorough expose of that foolishness.) No, we do not need to sacrifice one species for another - next will be the golden winged vs. blue winged warblers. The environmentalists need to knock it off - it's time they realized we are not God, and despite all efforts, they cannot save birds from one another without royally screwing up the rest of the ecological balance.
Posted by rusureuwant2know on March 27,2012 | 09:48 PM
If Science "believes" that Darwin is correct, then why are they concerned about the Bard Owl, is the concept of "The survival of the fittest" not appropriate anymore, professing to be wise, they became fools, Romans 1:22 New Testament. This is just too funny!! We puny humans have no ability to control created nature!
Posted by 1stLogVietnam on March 19,2012 | 10:35 PM
Is the barred owl is used as a scapecoat and excuse to lumber the rest of the old forest off?
I agree with the experts who wrote and said that the old growth forest should be preserved for many other reasons not only as habitat for the spotted owl but due to finding new drugs in such old places as was done with Taxol, a cancer drug found in such places.
Maybe people should just live a more sustainable lifestyle that includes growing food locally and trading it with restaurants and making a living and that probably would not lead to a lot of taxes collected as would happen in the lumber business. It could lead to more topsoil being created and people living healthier and even employing others to also help in growing local vegetables like in this case here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/23/garden/living-off-the-land-in-maine-even-in-winter.html?pagewanted=all
government turns around and writes 400 page draft environmental impact statements about the rationale of killing owls to let other owls live --- well that is taxpayer wasted money and we would be better off just living sustainable livelihoods not lumbering. thank you.
Posted by gudrun scott on March 1,2012 | 08:16 PM
What's wrong with Barred Owls making a presence there. They might have not been there for hundreds or even thousands of years but, to have balance in nature there must be change. The strong will survive. There are times when without the help of humans introducing species that other species overtake the home range of other animals. This could be part of the process of evolution.
Leave it alone or maybe stop clear cutting the home range of Barred Owls making them move their home range into a less dominant owls territory.
Derek Fritz
Posted by Derek Fritz on September 29,2011 | 03:01 PM
As a former Humboldt county resident, it's gratifying to know that the decimation of our timber industry, the loss of ten thousand good paying jobs and the economic misery that the entire region has suffered since those fateful prophetic prognostications emanated from those omniscient biologists, wasn't for naught. After all, how can one put a price on delaying for twenty years the inevitable demise of a species on Mother Nature's hit list, even when that price is measured out in human misery?
Posted by Jeff Patterson on July 14,2011 | 02:06 PM
We work at a wildlife center in Everson, WA. We have been getting a lot of barred owls in recently, and we have both witnessed their overall sweet disposition. And then we hear that people are planning to murder these innocent raptors, and for what? What do we gain out of it? (Jenny)
Barred owls have no less right to exist than Spotted owls. Barred Owls are wonderful creatures with their own voices. Now excuse us while we go tube feed a seagull. (Cheri)
Posted by Jenny and Cheri Foster on December 19,2010 | 04:35 PM
I cannot estimate how valid all of the science was that led to the listing of the NSO, but the listing was inevitable, since it served to protect remaining old-growth forest on Federal lands. The public had simply reached the point that cutting of old-growth, especially by clearcutting, was not considered acceptable. Most people equate old-growth with any forest composed of trees greater than 24 inches in diameter, though most of these may be second-growth, the product of either fire or past forest management. We have successfully moved much of our sustainable forest management practices out of the country by imposing severe restrictions upon wise and sustainable management. This, even in those areas of our vast Federal forest system where good, sustainable management can be done without causing significant effects to fish and wildlife resources. As usual, we simply went too far in one direction. Unfortunately, this may have increased the overall level of environmental impact substantially on a world-wide basis, since we import our wood from countries that provide minimal environmental protection. In the southern portion of the coastal range of the spotted owl, including much of northern California, the owl does quite well in managed forests, due to the abundance of prey species that forest management produces. Lets keep both the owl scientists and forest management scientists in communication, so that cooperative science leads the way, not the fear of chainsaws. The use of forest products in construction offsets a substantial amount of carbon dioxide production by providing an alternative to steel and concrete, while also maintaining viable rural industry in a region where it has all but disappeared, leaving destitute people in it's wake.
Posted by Marc Jameson on May 28,2010 | 07:04 PM
"barred and spotted owls ... are so closely related that they sometimes crossbreed, blurring species boundaries and diluting spotted owl genes."
By the very definition of SPECIES, one of these has been misnamed. Since they interbreed, they are the SAME species.
Posted by Frank Weigert on January 10,2010 | 08:22 AM
thank this help me alot on my history project obout the spotted owls
Posted by patty on April 15,2009 | 06:10 PM
As a retired BLM wildlife biologist, it was my pleasure to work with Dr. Eric Fosrman for over thirty years. From 1975 through about 1995, I worked primarily on Spotted owls but had opportunity to work with other noted individuals on everything from small mammals and birds to fungi and vascular plants. What this has shown is that the importance of the remaining old growth, virgin forests of the northwest cannot be overstated. This importance has been eclipsed by a single species focus on the spotted owl. These forests gave us taxol, a anti-cancer drug found in the bark of the Yew tree, very few of which existed outside of the natural, native forests, or second growth. At present, work on several species of fungi show promise as anti-inflamatory drugs and one species in particular has been effective in controlling several strains of tuberculosis bacteria. To date, very little of the biological resources found in the native forests have been screened. To lose the remnants of remaining native forest would be a travisty to mankind, not just the timber industry.
Posted by Gerald Mires on February 1,2009 | 06:39 PM
Of course they don't want to kill barred owls. The newcomer has provided more leverage in this "managed crisis" The plan is to keep the spotted owl at extinction levels (guess who's counting the owls?)to maintain control over federal forests. I've seen several spotted owls, and they were all in 2nd+ growth forests. These are wild animals with a built in ability to adapt. When are we going to realize that we can't freeze time in the moment when we thought it was best?
Posted by Nikole Jacoby on January 9,2009 | 12:10 AM
As humans, we have a duty to protect the enivironment from ourselves as we do our best to co-exist with it; however, when cases like this where a stronger, more "fit" animal comes along and causes the extinction of another animal it is simply natural for this to happen. To me, targeted hunts are ethically similar to the destruction of habits for timber. We need to protect habitats but also not interfere with the natural order of things even if that the extinction of some animals.
Posted by Zach Blake on January 9,2009 | 09:20 PM
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