Prague Ural Owls travelled to Austria
23. 01. 2014
Two Ural Owls, which are the largest Czech owls, travelled from Prague Zoo to Austria. They will help to preserve local wild population which has significantly decreased. During previous years Prague Zoo repeatedly released Ural Owls also to the wild forests of Šumava.

Young Ural Owl has enriched Šumava population. Photo: Ivan Dudáček
They arrived to breed
The two young males arrived to Austrian Richard Faust Centre in Haringsee last week. Immediately after arrival they inhabited a large aviary in the rescue centre. “As they have an extraordinary favourable origin, they will live there in the breeding aviary and their chicks will be released to the wild,” explained Antonín Vaidl, the curator of birds.
International Owl Community
The parents of the young owls came from Slovakia as injured birds which found a refuge in Prague Zoo. One of the young males will live with a female owl from Slovenia, whereas the other one will create a couple with a female coming from Austrian wilderness.
Šumava population is doing well
Descendants of the Ural Owls from Prague should help to connect the European population of this Carpathian subspecies, which is fairly fragmented, especially in Austria. Prague Zoo offered the two males to Austria after successful reintroduction of the species in Šumava. Currently, there are almost twenty couples of them and they are successfully reproducing.
Breeding couple in Prague nesting again
The breeding couple of Ural Owls in Prague Zoo began nesting again shortly after the departure of their young to Austria. Within the breeding programme the Zoo will continue to support Ural Owls, and it also intends to reintroduce other species of owls to the wild, such as Little Owl or Barn Owl.