BIRDS—STRIGINAE—BUBO YIRGINIANUS. 
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BUBO, Cuvier. 
Bubo, Cuvier, Regne Animal, I, p. 331, (1817.) 
Size large ; general form very robust and powerful. Head large, with conspicuous ear tufts ; eyes very large ; wings long; 
tail short; legs and toes very strong, densely feathered ; claws very strong ; bill rather short, strong, curved, covered at base by 
projecting feathers. 
This genus includes the large horned owls, or cat owls, as they are sometimes called. These 
birds are most numerous in Asia and Africa, and there are in all countries about fifteen species. 
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BUBO VIRGrINIANUS, Omelin. 
The Great Horned Owl. 
Strix virginiana, Gm. Syst. Nat. I, p. 287, (1788.) 
Strix pylhaules, Bartram, Travels, p. 289, (1791.) 
Bubo ludoviciana, Daudin, Traite d’Orn. II, p. 210, (1800.) 
Bubo pinicola, Vieill Ois. d’Am. Sept. I, p. 51, (1807.) 
Bubo arcticus, Swains. Faun. Bor. Am. Birds, p. 86, (1831.) 
Bubo sub-arcticus, Hot, Proc. Acad. Philada. VI, p. 211, (1852.) 
Bubo septentrionalis, Brehm, Vog. Deutschl. p. 120, (1831?) 
Strix scandiaca, Linn. Syst. Nat. I, p. 132, (1766) ? 
Strix magellanicus, Gm. Syst. Nat. I, p. 286, (1768) ? 
Strix nacurutu, Vieill. Nouv. Diet. VII, p. 44, (1817)? 
Figures. —Edward’s Birds II, pi. 60; Vieill. Ois. d’Am. Sept. I, pi. 19 ; Wilson Am. Orn. VII, pi. 50, fig. 1 ; Aud. B. of 
Am. pi. 61: Oct. ed. I, pi. 39 ; Nat. Hist. New York, pi. 10, fig. 22 ; Fauna Bor. Am. Birds, pi. 30. 
Jldult. —Large and very strongly organized ; ear tufts large, erectile ; bill strong, fully curved : wing rather long ; third quill 
usually longest; tail short; legs and toes very robust, and densely covered with short downy feathers ; claws very strong, 
sharp, curved. Very variable in plumage, from nearly white to dark brown ; usually with the upper parts dark brown, every 
feather mottled and with irregular transverse lines of pale ashy and reddish fulvous, the latter being the color of all the plumage 
at the bases of the feathers. Ear tufts dark brown, nearly black, edged on their inner webs with dark fulvous ; a black spot 
above the eye ; radiating feathers behind the eye, varying in color from nearly white to dark reddish fulvous, usually the latter; 
feathers of the facial disc tipped with black. Throat and neck before white ; breast with wide longitudinal stripes of black ; 
other under parts variegated with white and fulvous, and every feather having transverse narrow lines of dark brown. Middle 
of the abdomen frequently, but not always, white. Legs and toes varying from white to dark fulvous, usually pale fulvous ; 
in most specimens unspotted, but frequently, and probably always in fully mature specimens, with transvere narrow bars of 
dark brown. Quills brown, with wide transverse bands of cinereous, and usually tinged on the inner webs with pale fulvous ; 
tail the same, with the fulvous predominating on the outer feathers ; iris yellow ; bill and claws bluish black. 
Dimensions. —Female, length 21 to 25 inches, wing 14g to 16, tail 10 inches. Male, 18 to 21 inches, wing 14 to 15, tail 9 
inches. The smallest specimen of the variety Pacific us. 
Hab. —The whole of North America, and probably South America. 
Variety. — Bubo virginianus atlanticus, Cassin, B. of Cal. and Texas, I, p. 178. 
Dark colored, as described above. Feathers of the face behind the eye always bright reddish fulvous, and the entire plumage 
more marked with that color than in the other varieties below. 
This variety is found throughout the temperate regions of North America, and we have never 
known any other to be noticed in the States on the Atlantic ocean, though the variety Arcticus 
may occur. This is the true B. virginianus of authors, and is figured by Wilson, Audubon, 
and others. 
Variety. — Bubo virginianus pacificus, Cassin, B. of Cal. and Texas, I, p. 178. 
Dark colored, as above. Feathers of the face behind the eye ashy, generally, however, tinged with fulvous. General color 
less tinged with fulvous than in the preceding variety, and frequently much paler, and approximating to the variety arcticus. 
