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Snowy owls aren't uncommon in winter in Minnesota and Wisconsin, but they're far more plentiful than usual this year, Erickson said. At the airport in Minneapolis, biologists have had to trap and move snowy owls for fear they'd be sucked into a jet engine, she said. "As birds of the tundra, they're drawn to large open fields like airports," Erickson said. The increase in southerly sightings is most likely a temporary phenomenon. Back in the arctic next summer, the larger population of owls may devour so many lemmings that food scarcity will bring the owl population back down, Erickson said. ___ On the Net: eBird sighting database: http://eBird.org/
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