From Frank Buck Zoo

The “whiskers” on a Spectacled Owl aren’t true whiskers like you’d see on a mammal-they’re actually specialized feathers called rictal bristles.

Rictal bristles are stiff, hair-like feathers that grow around the base of the beak. In spectacled owls, they can look especially prominent, giving that whiskered appearance around the face.

    • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
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      4 days ago

      Oh, I’m a dum dum! 😔

      You are close that they are eye-related. Owls can’t move their eyes in their sockets because they are too large and not round. That is why they do all the head twisting to see all around.

      That works well for things a distance away, but that leaves them with a blind spot up close between their eyes!

      Enter the rictal bristles… These are thought to be of a sensory nature, like cat whiskers. They let them “see” in that blind spot and also potentially get some feedback from the air in flight, or feel around in the dark.

      Other birds have them, not just owls. They are named after the area around the beak, the rictus.

      Note: not an owl

      • Optional@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Note: not an owl

        lol. I was gonna have to dig deep in the wild-@$% guess bag for that species!

        • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 days ago

          It’s the internet, I knew some smarty pants would say something if I didn’t make it clear in advance. 🤡