Ow, ow, owl: Birders ID culprit in Salem jogger attacks

Mike Havlik, head naturalist with Des Moines Y-Camp, displays a barred owl while giving a presentation to a fourth-grade class at Hoover Elementary School on Jan. 15, 2015, in Dubuque, Iowa.
Mike Havlik, head naturalist with Des Moines Y-Camp, displays a barred owl while giving a presentation to a fourth-grade class at Hoover Elementary School on Jan. 15, 2015, in Dubuque, Iowa.

SALEM, Ore. -- The bird attacking joggers in a Salem city park has been identified as a barred owl, a species the federal government is spending millions to kill in Northwest forests.

One runner reported Jan. 13 that he thought he was having a stroke when the bird twice knocked him in the head.

The initial identification was great horned owl. The Salem Statesman Journal reports (http://bit.ly/1LszzLa) Audubon Society birders now say it's a barred owl, an invasive species from the East that is the greatest threat to northern spotted owls, a threatened species.

The U.S. Forest Service is engaged in a $3.5 million experiment to see if shooting barred owls will help spotted owls turn around their downward population trend.

Barred owls are territorial during mating season, which lasts a few more weeks.

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