Both species are native to that region.
Owls screech simply to communicate. Not all owls hoot, like Barn Owls for example, so screeching is not necessarily a sign of aggression, but rather just their way of communicating.
Where ever there is prey for them, they are screech owls and don't require a barn to live in
A barn owl is in the family Tytonidae, with heart-shaped faces, no ears, dark eyes, and they don't hoot. A screech owl is in the family Strigidae, known as true owls. Screech owls have ears, are generally smaller than barn owls, have yellow to amber eyes, and have two different morphs: red, and gray.
Yes, the barn, burrowing, barred, screech, and great horned owls are found there.
Barn owls care for there young by going in and out of the nest carrying food for the young when the young barn owls screech for food.
Great Horned owls, barred owls, eastern screech owls, northern saw-whet owls, barn owls,short eard owls and long eared owls.
Species that reside there year round include the barred owl, horned owl, screech owl, burrowing owl, and barn owl. In winter, the short eared and long eared owls are present as well in varying numbers.
They make a whinnying sound during mating season.
eastern screech owls.
It depends on the owl. Most hoot but the long eared owl "who". Barn owls click tounges and make high pitched shries. Lots of owls screech.
No. They beller or moo, they never screech. Cougars, cats and owls (at least a couple species of owls do) screech, not cows.
Barn owl, elf owl, burrowing owl, western screech owl, eastern screech owl, barred owl, horned owl, long eared and short eared owl.