Which end of what raptor?
A neighbour, by Australian standards (as her house is about 3km away in a straight line, by European standards she'd probably be in a different country) reported the following to me.
Here is a close-up of the fur, which suggests rabbit rather than possum, but alternative views welcomed
The discussion of that image considers it to be about twice the size of a Powerful Owl pellet. A comment was also made that it the bone content is mostly broken, as in this case, that suggests Eagle rather than Owl.
A final thought is that Wedge-tailed Eagles are common on the Plain while Powerful Owls are far less so.
So I think I end up with this being a pellet coughed up by a Wedge-tailed Eagle rather than a scat shat by a Powl.
"I found a relatively tight little ball of mainly ticked hair. It was about 8 to 10 cm long with a circumference of about 10 cm. I opened it up to check it out and within it there were a number of bones. .... How about a Powerful Owl? "I contacted a few experts and the key points offered were:
- The size of the item suggested it was a tad large for a Powerful Owl (hereafter, Powl) scat (based on observation of the material delivered by the Turner Powl);
- It might be a coughed-up pellet rather than a squirted-down scat,
- Given the location (near the Hoskinstown Plain) Wedge-tailed Eagle was a possibility. Most raptors cough up undigestible material.
Here is a close-up of the fur, which suggests rabbit rather than possum, but alternative views welcomed
The biggest bone pulled out was clearly a vertebra, and the lack of points of muscle attachment made me think of it being a caudal vertebra. which argues against bunny. See comments below.
There were a number of bone fragments of various sizes including one bit that I rate as a rib.
We also looked briefly at a Google page for Powerful Owl scats and I decided it would be less grief if I did my own search in compiling this post. Of course, I haven't been able to recreate the exact search results my neighbour achieved. This was certainly one of the images (from Yowiehunters):The discussion of that image considers it to be about twice the size of a Powerful Owl pellet. A comment was also made that it the bone content is mostly broken, as in this case, that suggests Eagle rather than Owl.
A final thought is that Wedge-tailed Eagles are common on the Plain while Powerful Owls are far less so.
So I think I end up with this being a pellet coughed up by a Wedge-tailed Eagle rather than a scat shat by a Powl.
Comments
Martin