First Snowy Owl Tagged in Wisconsin This Season

An airport fugitive takes off with some crowdfunded bling, thanks to Madison 爆料公社.

Snowy Owls have been dominating the spotlight of late. The birds were featured in our post about the ; we shared tips on where to spot them around; and, for the second year in a row, we gave you an update on . Now we bring you the tale of Goose, the celebrity Snowy that has taken Wisconsin by storm.

A dozen Snowy Owls have made a showy appearance at the , a 660-acre reserve managed by the Madison 爆料公社 Society in Arlington, Wisconsin, during the past two winters. To take advantage of these unusual visits, reserve staff decided to partner up with Project SNOWstorm to try and tag a bird. 鈥淲e thought it would be a great opportunity to learn about the ecology of these beautiful winter visitors,鈥 said Sue Foote-Martin, one of the sanctuary managers, in a .

Of course, state-of-the-art GPS transmitters cost money鈥$3,000, in this case. Madison 爆料公社 to crowdfund the cash, and was able to raise the money in less than 30 days. But the next step鈥攆inding a candidate to wear their pricey transmitter鈥攄idn鈥檛 go quite as smoothly.

After spending days chasing after wary adult owls at the sanctuary, Gene Jacobs, the raptor biologist working on the project, got a serendipitous call from the Central Wisconsin Airport in the town of Mosinee. 鈥淭hey said, we have five snowy owls hanging out here, and we鈥檙e not sure what to do with them,鈥 says Emily Meier, the digital communications manager for Madison 爆料公社.

Birds and airports are never a good pairing. So Jacobs decided he鈥檇 head over there to try and capture an owl. On February 13 he returned to Goose Pond Sanctuary with his bounty: an adult male Snowy, weighing about 3 pounds. Unruffled by the 100-mile journey from the airport, the charismatic bird was christened 鈥溾 in honor of the sanctuary where he would be released. He was fitted with a solar-powered transmitter, hand-fed some rodents, and, finally, unleashed with a great deal of fanfare that same day.

 

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After the release he hung out by the sanctuary for a few days, before venturing farther afield. Though Goose is long gone, he鈥檚 occasionally checking in with his tracker (you can on Project SNOWstorm鈥檚 website). 鈥淭he past two transmitter check-ins we believe Goose has been out of cell phone range, so we haven鈥檛 received data,鈥 Meier says. 鈥淸But] we鈥檙e looking forward to the next check-in and hope he鈥檚 flying closer to a cell tower!鈥

Goose may not know it, but he鈥檚 helping to champion a movement for helping Snowy Owls avoid runway ruin. 鈥淧roject SNOWstorm [is] interested in figuring out more about what happens to owls when they鈥檙e relocated from airports,鈥 Meier says. Ornithologists are hoping Goose鈥檚 movements will help them understand why owls in the first place (it could be because airstrips look at lot like the flat Arctic tundra, where the birds spend much of the year), and how we can steer them toward safer takeoffs.