As we arrive at November, we also recognise and moustaches in unison over the month to signify We at Suffolk Owl Sanctuary would like to join all those taking part in solidarity by highlighting some of our owls’ very own funky 'moustaches!
Owls have a set of moustache-like feathers around their beaks called crines. These crines are specially adapted feathers that act like whiskers, helping the owl to feel for their food and surroundings in front of them! This is because their eyes are not adapted to see very well at short range.
Crines seems to be the UK English term. The only references I saw to this word are in UK or Canadian sites. We’ve talked about these before as rictal bristles.
We’re able to move our eyeballs to stare at our nose and mouth area, but as owl eyes are fixed in position, that leaves them with a blind spot there. That’s where these special feathers come in!
I thought this was a sub dedicated to owls. This is just a picture of Jamie Hyneman
We tested Bird Balance – can a car balanced on the edge of a cliff topple over if a bird perches on the front end? – twice. The first time was in 2011, and it’s when I fell in love with owls. – Kari Byron
That’s really cool!
Owls turn up everywhere!
Wonder if they run into issues with crines similar to an eyelash falling right into our eyes.
Maybe you’ve cracked the code on the real reason for that third eyelid!