For centuries, owls have been featured in children's books and folk tales capturing imaginations the world over. With their haunting calls and charismatic faces, these birds remain popular but mysterious because it's rare to catch more than a glimpse of one in the wild. Unlike their cousins, the hawks, eagles and falcons, owls are the only bird of prey able to also hunt effectively at night when they have the skies to themselves. This has helped them become one of the most successful birds on earth, but the chief reason is due to their extraordinary super powers.
To examine these special skills, filmmakers enlisted the help of veteran bird handlers, experts and technology to demonstrate and test the owl's amazing abilities. Owl Power airs tonight, February 18, 2015 at 8 p.m. (ET) on PBS (check local listings). After broadcast, the episodes will be available for online streaming at pbs.org/nature.
The program follows the lives of two barn owl chicks from the moment they hatch to show their development into super-powered owls. Luna and Lily are cared for by longtime bird handlers and trainers Lloyd and Rose Buck who also raise other birds of prey in the English countryside. It takes two weeks for the chicks to open their eyes, but in just two months, they're nearly adult barn owls and beginning their flight practice.
To illustrate why owls fly slower than other birds, Lily is put to the test against a peregrine falcon and a graylag goose. The film compares their different wing shapes using a high speed camera and computer graphics to show how design affects speed. Ornithologist Graham Martin of the University of Birmingham explains that the barn owl has the largest wings in relation to its body and an overall wing design that enables it to fly slowly as it hunts, then drop on prey in a flash. Bad luck for mice and voles.
Owls have especially large eyes and a particularly high density of rod cells in their retinas. Together, these special adaptations allow them to gather enough available light to hunt at night. They are able to detect an image two and a half times brighter than the one we see. And in addition to especially keen eyesight, owls are capable of hunting without even seeing their prey. A blanket of snow may deter others, but an owl can hear its target underneath. An owl's whole head is designed for listening; its distinctive round face is shaped like a satellite dish, specifically to detect sound. The program notes that at certain frequencies, an owl's hearing is 10 times more sensitive than ours.
But of all their amazing traits, most unique is how quiet an owl is in flight. The film shows a test performed in a studio rigged with super-sensitive microphones. Each of three birds, Lloyd and Rose's barn owl Kensa, a pigeon and a peregrine, fly over the set of microphones which capture any sound that is generated. Only Kensa's test registers as silence due to several factors including having special flight feathers that reduce air turbulence around the wing. This stealth-like power is another example of why owls have such a commanding edge when it comes to their hunting success.
Nature is a production of THIRTEEN Productions LLC for WNET. For Nature, Fred Kaufman is executive producer. Owl Power is a THIRTEEN Productions LLC and BBC Productions coproduction for BBC and WNET.
Nature pioneered a television genre that is now widely emulated in the broadcast industry. Throughout its history, Nature has brought the natural world to millions of viewers. The series has been consistently among the most-watched primetime series on public television.
Nature has won over 700 honors from the television industry, the international wildlife film communities and environmental organizations, including 12 Emmys and three Peabodys. The series received two of wildlife film industry's highest honors: the Christopher Parsons Outstanding Achievement Award given by the Wildscreen Festival and the Grand Teton Award given by the Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival. The International Wildlife Film Festival also honored Nature executive producer Fred Kaufman with its Lifetime Achievement Award for Media.
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Support for this Nature program was made possible in part by the Arnhold Family in memory of Clarisse Arnhold, Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III, the Estate of Elizabeth A. Vernon, the Lillian Goldman Charitable Trust, the Kate W. Cassidy Foundation, the Filomen M. D'Agostino Foundation, Susan Malloy and the Sun Hill Foundation, by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and by the nation's public television stations.
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