Tyto
Tyto is a genus of birds consisting of true barn owls, grass owls and masked owls that collectively make up all the species within the subfamily Tytoninae of the barn owl family, Tytonidae.
Taxonomy and systematics
Throughout their evolutionary history, Tyto owls have shown a better capability to colonize islands than other owls. Several such island forms have become extinct, some long ago, but some in comparatively recent times. A number of insular barn owls from the Mediterranean and the Caribbean were very large or truly gigantic species.Extant species
Seventeen species are recognized:Image | Common name | Scientific name | Distribution |
Greater sooty owl | Tyto tenebricosa | Australia | |
Lesser sooty owl | Tyto multipunctata | Australia | |
Minahassa masked owl | Tyto inexspectata | Sulawesi, Indonesia | |
Taliabu masked owl | Tyto nigrobrunnea | Sula Islands, Maluku, Indonesia | |
Moluccan masked owl | Tyto sororcula | south Moluccas of Indonesia | |
Manus masked owl | Tyto manusi | Manus Island in the Admiralty Islands | |
Golden masked owl | Tyto aurantia | the island of New Britain, Papua New Guinea | |
Australian masked owl | Tyto novaehollandiae | Southern New Guinea and the non-desert areas of Australia. | |
Sulawesi masked owl | Tyto rosenbergii | the Indonesian islands of Sulawesi, Sangihe and Peleng | |
Red owl | Tyto soumagnei | Madagascar | |
Western barn owl | Tyto alba | Eurasia and Africa. | |
American barn owl | Tyto furcata | the Americas | |
Eastern barn owl | Tyto javanica | southeast Asia and Australasia. | |
Andaman masked owl | Tyto deroepstorffi | southern Andaman Islands | |
Ashy-faced owl | Tyto glaucops | Haiti and the Dominican Republic. | |
African grass owl | Tyto capensis | southern Congo and northern Angola to the central coast of Mozambique and the other centred on South Africa from the Western Cape north to the southern extremities of Zimbabwe, Botswana and Mozambique. | |
Eastern grass owl | Tyto longimembris | eastern, southern and southeast Asia, parts of New Guinea, Australia and the western Pacific |
Extinct species
;Known from ancient fossils:- Tyto sanctialbani - formerly in Strix; includes T. campiterrae
- Tyto robusta
- Tyto gigantea
- Tyto balearica
- Tyto mourerchauvireae
- Tyto jinniushanensis
- Tyto sp. 1
- Tyto sp. 2
- Mussau barn owl found in Mussau
- New Ireland greater barn owl found in New Ireland
- New Ireland lesser barn owl found in New Ireland
- New Caledonian barn owl found in New Caledonia - tentatively placed here
- Puerto Rican barn owl found in Puerto Rico - may still have existed up to 1912; possibly a subspecies of the ashy-faced owl
- Noel's barn owl found in Cuba
- Rivero's barn owl found in Cuba
- Cuban barn owl found in Cuba
- Hispaniolan barn owl found in Hispaniola
- Bahaman barn owl found in Little Exuma, New Providence, and maybe Andros Island, the Bahamas - may have survived into the 16th century
- Barbuda barn owl found in Barbuda and possibly Antigua
- Maltese barn owl found in Malta - formerly in Strix; possibly a paleosubspecies of Tyto alba
Former species
- Tyto antiqua was a barn owl of the prehistoric genus Prosybris; this taxon might be a nomen nudum, as the species was originally described in Strix, this requires confirmation
- Tyto edwardsi was a strigid owl, but has not yet been reliably identified to a genus; it might belong in Strix or the European Ninox-like group.
- Tyto ignota was a strigid owl of unclear affinities; while it might belong into Strix, this requires confirmation
- "TMT 164", a distal left tarsometatarsus of a supposed Tyto from the Middle Miocene Grive-Saint-Alban ; might also belong in Prosybris, as it is similar to Tyto antiqua
Description