this post was submitted on 19 Sep 2025
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From Asia News Network

When dusk falls over the countryside, a hush settles on the trees. Once, that silence would be broken by the soft “whoo-whoo” of a spotted owlet or the eerie call of a barn owl gliding above rice paddies. Now, the night feels strangely silent.

Owls—those mysterious, misunderstood raptors—are vanishing from Bangladesh’s landscapes. Their disappearance is not only a cultural loss; it is a warning. The fading of these night hunters signals ecological imbalance and a deepening silence in nature’s nocturnal orchestra.

Forests falling, owls fading

Bangladesh hosts more than 20 species of owls, including the barn owl (Tyto alba), brown fish owl (Ketupa zeylonensis), spotted owlet (Athene brama), and the elusive collared scops owl (Otus lettia).

Each species relies on tree cavities, dense forests, bamboo groves, and quiet farmlands to nest and hunt. But rapid deforestation, unplanned urbanisation, and infrastructure expansion are devouring their habitats.

Dr Rafiq Azam, a forest ecologist, notes: “Where trees once stood tall and silent, concrete now echoes. Owls are losing not just their homes, but their very ability to survive in nature.”

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates that Bangladesh loses nearly 2,000 hectares of forest annually, and this erosion of green cover is directly tied to shrinking owl populations.

Human fear, folklore, and harm

Superstition compounds the problem. In rural folklore, owls are often seen as omens of death or bad luck. Such beliefs fuel needless killings, especially of barn owls, whose pale face and haunting calls make them targets.

Some species are trapped for the illegal wildlife trade or used in traditional medicine. Others die from electrocution on power lines, collisions with vehicles, or entanglement in barbed wire as they are forced into human-dominated landscapes.

“We have turned cultural myths into excuses for cruelty. Every owl killed by superstition takes away a guardian of our fields,” laments wildlife activist Sharmin Jahan

Pesticides poison the night

Owls are natural pest controllers, but pesticides have turned their strength into vulnerability. When rats or insects consume poisoned food, owls that prey on them ingest toxins second-hand.

Modern rodenticides—often anticoagulants—cause internal bleeding. A single poisoned rat can kill an adult owl. Nestlings fed contaminated prey rarely survive.

A recent study in India found rodenticide residues in 60% of barn owl pellets examined—a worrying indicator for neighbouring Bangladesh.

Why owls matter

Natural pest controllers

One barn owl family can consume over 3,000 rodents in a breeding season, protecting rice, vegetable, and grain crops. By reducing pest pressure, owls save farmers money and reduce dependence on toxic chemicals.

Ecosystem balancers

As apex nocturnal predators, owls regulate prey populations. Without them, rodent numbers can explode, leading to crop damage, disease outbreaks, and cascading ecological imbalance.

Bioindicators of ecosystem health

Because owls are highly sensitive to environmental changes, their presence—or absence—reflects the health of ecosystems. A decline in owls is an early warning of habitat collapse and biodiversity loss.

Cultural and educational value

Despite superstition, owls also appear in Bangladeshi folklore and proverbs, often symbolising wisdom and mystery. Today, they serve as “gateway species” for environmental education—capturing children’s imagination and linking conservation with cultural heritage.

As Dr Mohammad Ali Reza Khan, veteran Bangladeshi ornithologist, observes: “Owls are misunderstood protectors. If Bangladesh loses them, it loses an ally in farming, in culture, and in biodiversity itself.”

What can be done

In villages and towns

Install owl nest boxes in schools, farms, and homesteads.

Launch awareness programmes to challenge superstition and highlight their role in farming.

Avoid nighttime use of rodenticides, especially during breeding seasons.

In forest and farmland

Conserve large trees and allow deadwood to remain as nesting sites.

Promote owl-friendly farming by encouraging organic pest control.

Train farmers to recognise and protect owl species.

Policy and protection

Enforce wildlife laws to curb hunting and trade of owls.

Integrate owls into Bangladesh’s National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (NBSAP).

Support research and citizen science to monitor owl populations and trends.

A final glimpse

Their eyes shine like moons in the dark. Their wings slice silently through the night. For centuries, owls have watched over our fields and forests—unseen guardians of balance. But now, they are watching us with dwindling numbers, slipping into silence.

If we lose them, we lose not just a species, but an entire night chorus—a silence heavy with meaning. The forests grow darker. The nights grow quieter.

Before the silence deepens beyond recovery, let us protect the owls: wise, mysterious, and vital. For in saving them, we save the night itself.

A little bit of a bummer article, but I liked the style of writing, plus I thought I could share a bunch of the owls!

I could only find 14 owls of Bangladesh. I'll post them below. See if you can pick a favorite and let me know!

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[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

There is always part of my mind that wants to cuddle animals. Working with them though has very much cemented in my head they are never going to want that!

Something something don't meet your heroes... 😄

(But I still want to cuddle them even if they're bitey. I'm stubborn like that!)

[–] Maeve@kbin.earth 2 points 6 months ago