Diet of a Maghreb Owl <em>Strix mauritanica</em> individual at Kahf Lakhal cave on Jbel Moussa, northern Morocco

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Diet of a Maghreb Owl Strix mauritanica individual at Kahf Lakhal cave on Jbel Moussa, northern Morocco

Published in: Ostrich: Journal of African Ornithology
Volume 95 , issue 3 , 2024 , pages: 220–226
DOI: 10.2989/00306525.2024.2386054
Author(s): Abdeslam Rihane , Morocco , Abdelmottalib Nahli University of Hassan II Casablanca, Morocco , EL-Mustapha Laghzaoui , Morocco , Youssef Dbiba , Morocco , Mohamed Radi , Morocco , Mohamed Dakki , Morocco , El Hassan El Mouden , Morocco , Rhimou El Hamoumi University of Hassan II Casablanca, Morocco

Abstract

The diet of a single Maghreb Owl Strix mauritanica (family Strigidae) was examined within its natural habitat at Kahf Lakhal cave on Jbel Moussa, a mountain in northern Morocco. The two distinct batches of pellets collected contained a total of 190 prey items. Pellet analysis revealed a diet comprised of four primary taxonomic classes of prey: mammals, insects, birds and reptiles. We identified 29 prey species, representing 21 families. Mammals were the most prominent component, accounting for 49.5% of the diet items and included at least nine distinct species. Insects constituted 28.9% of the diet, representing at least eight species; birds comprised 20%, representing at least 11 species; and reptiles were represented by a single species (3.4%). Numerically, the most frequently captured prey species were the common bent-wing bat Miniopterus schreibersii (22.1%), black rat Rattus rattus (8.4%) and European rhinoceros beetle Oryctes nasicornis (7.9%). In biomass, black rats were the biggest component of the owl’s diet (31.8%), followed by Barbary Partridges Alectoris barbara and hares Lepus sp. (each 11.9%); together these three species comprised more than half the estimated biomass of the prey types consumed by the owl. This investigation significantly improves our knowledge of the diet of the Maghreb Owl in the North African region.

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