Find Snowy Owl plush toys and gifts at Animals n More.
These plush toy and Snowy Owl figurines can be found at our sponsor's online Gift Shop. They include a Cuddlekins Snowy Owl made by Wild Republic, a Stuffed Animal House plush toy Snowy Owl, a Wild Republic Natural Poses plush Snowy Owl, a Snowy Owl wall vase, a WOW Snowy Owl plush toy with glow in the dark eyes, a Bejeweled Enamel Flying White Snowy Owl Trinket Box, Legend the Douglas Cuddle Toys plush Snowy Owl. There is also a little Snowy Owl ornament from Ganz, an Owl Page Pal Bookmark and an owl keychain.
The Snowy Owl, Nyctea scandiaca, of the family Strigidae, is a large 24 inch white owl with rounded head and yellow eyes and a wingspan of 4 feet 7 inches. Dark bars and spots are heavier on females, heaviest on young birds. Old males may be pure white. The Snowy's habitat is open country: tundra, dunes, marshes and fields, plains. Snowy Owls show little fear of human activities, and so it is not uncommon to see one perched on the roof of a building or on a highway sign beside an airport.
The owls are usually silent in winter, but on their breeding grounds they hoot, whistle, rattle and bark.
The nest, found on the ground, is lined with feathers, mosses and lichens. There the female lays 5-8 white eggs.
In order to withstand the harsh northern winters, Snowies are densely covered with feathers all the way down to their toes.
The prey is chiefly lemmings but Snowies also take hares, ptarmigan, shorebirds, small ducks, and other birds, as well as some fish. They hunt by day during the Arctic summer, as well as at night.
The Snowy retreats from the northernmost part of its range in winter. In years when the lemming population plummets, Snowies may wander in winter as far south as northern Alabama, Oklahoma and central California. These irruptives, usually heavily barred younger birds, are often highly visible, perched conspicuously on the ground or on low stumps, fence posts and buildings. Snowies breed in northern Alaska and in northernmost Canada. They winter south throughout Canada into the northern United States, irregularly farther. They are also found in Eurasia.