Seasoned turkey hunters know a well-timed owl hoot can get nearby gobblers talking. But why do turkeys respond to owls at all?
The post Why Do Turkeys Gobble at Owls? appeared first on Outdoor Life.
Of all the creative ways to strike up a gobble, the owl hoot is a tried-and-true classic. But in all the times you’ve let “who cooks for you” rip, have you ever stopped to wonder why turkeys often gobble in response to owls? Great horned owls have been known to prey on turkeys, so could it just be the gobbler alerting other turkeys to the danger, right?
According to renowned turkey biologist and diehard hunter Dr. Mike Chamberlain, that’s not exactly the case. Here’s some insight into the real reason why turkeys gobble at owls.
Read through the whole story, or tap on a topic below to jump right to it.
Before we can understand why turkeys gobble at owls, it helps to understand why turkeys gobble in general. The primary reason turkeys gobble is to attract attention, Chamberlain says.
“They’re also trying to let each other know [where they are],” Chamberlain tells Outdoor Life. “They’re maintaining their relationships with other males when they gobble. ‘Hey I’m still over here, you can stay over there.’”
Once the gobbler hears a response from other turkeys or other critters in the area, he’ll react accordingly.
“If they know where hens are going to be or they have hens, it doesn’t make any sense for them to gobble once they get on the ground. Most gobbling is supposed to be around the roost site and then they’re supposed to shut up a little bit and not be so obnoxious.”
With this in mind, it makes sense that a tom would gobble at yelping hens or a rival gobbler. But what about gobbling in response to owls, crows, coyotes, or even gun shots?
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Chamberlain says that toms will often gobble at those sounds because they fall within the same frequency as a gobble. In other words, a tom is already keyed up and ready to respond to a gobble. When he hears a noise at the same frequency as a gobble, his instinct is to gobble at that sound. It’s not that he’s actually trying to co*municate with an owl or crow. Hunters typically call this kind of gobble a shock gobble.
Chamberlain led a study that followed GPS-collared gobblers and used microphones attached to trees to record their vocalizations. Through that research he noticed that toms would often gobble at sounds that fell within a certain frequency.
Frequency is another term for pitch. It describes the number of times per second that a sound pressure wave repeats. Lower-pitched sounds are deeper, and fewer sound pressure waves hit the eardrum for the duration of the sound. Higher-pitched sounds are more shrill, and exert more sound pressure waves on the eardrum.
“One of the other things that’s interesting to hunters is how many other sounds are in the same frequency band of a gobble. We record gobbling activity with these remote listening devices. Then we have a machine learning tool that goes through and pulls all the gobbles out. But [that tool] also pulls out other sounds that are in that same frequency because it can’t tell the difference between a gobble and, say, a gunshot,” Chamberlain explains. “A coyote howl, a Canada goose honk, a barred owl, a crow … all these things stimulate a bird to gobble. So it does appear that a lot of the sounds that prompt a bird to gobble [are] in the same frequency.”
The owl hoot that’s passed down from one generation of turkey hunters to the next is meant to imitate a barred owl. The cadence of a barred owl’s call sounds like saying, “Who cooks for you, who cooks for you-all?” This is a rough approximation of the eight-beat sequence of a barred owl’s call.
But turkeys don’t need to worry about barred owls the way they do other owl species. Great horned owls are a verified predator of the wild turkey and won’t hesitate to take one down. Barred owls, not so much. If turkeys were to gobble at owls out of defense against predation, they’d be gobbling at the great horned variety instead.
“Horned owls will kill turkeys. But we’re making barred owl calls. I don’t think they’re adversarial. I think it’s in that frequency band and it prompts them to respond to it,” Chamberlain says. “One of my favorite locator calls is a Canada goose call. And I’m an okay Canada goose caller. I do okay when I goose hunt. I’m certainly not Fred Zink, but I can get by with it and I don’t think the turkeys care.”
The barred owl call is so popular among turkey hunters because barred owls have a wide range and are especially vocal during their spring mating season. Their population covers the entire eastern half of the United States and southern Canada, according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. In the western part of the continent, they exist in a thin band across the lower half of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta before spreading out to populate the eastern half of British Columbia and trickling down into northern Washington and Idaho.
When spring rolls around, barred owl mating behavior gets quite noisy. First, they must find mates, which involves a distinct two-beat answer to the eight-beat “Who cooks for you?” The Owl Foundation describes this replying sound as a “wack-oh” and it might be used to either reply to a nearby co*peting male or a potential mating female. Then, males and females vocalize together during courtship. In this two-beat vocalization, the second beat rises in pitch from the first just slightly. They steadily repeat this call in a long series. Once mating and hatching is successful, hatchlings are also noisy, whether it’s a hungry yelp or a juvenile attempt at the classic eight-beat hoot.
According to Chamberlain’s research, it doesn’t really matter what your owl hoot sounds like so long as it falls within the same frequency band as a real owl (or a real gobble). When turkeys gobble at owls, they likely aren’t listening to make sure the sound is identical to other hoots. But still, it’s best to sound as realistic as possible in the turkey woods, especially if you’re hunting pressured gobblers. If you can’t make an owl hoot with your voice, there are a variety of owl calls on the market (read our review of the best turkey calls here).
Getting a shock-gobble response from an owl hoot often has less to do with how the hoot sounds and more to do with the hunter’s approach, timing, and patience. When you’re trying to strike toms with an owl hoot, follow these tips:
Read Next: Tips for Roosting a Turkey
Just remember that the owl hoot isn’t a silver bullet. Some nights toms won’t respond no matter how good you sound or how sneaky you are in the woods. We might know why turkeys gobble at owls, but unfortunately, there’s no way for us to know why they don’t. Then again, the unpredictability of a wild gobbler is what makes hunting him so fun.
Yes, great horned owls are known to attack and kill wild turkeys. Research shows that great horned owls most co*monly attack turkeys on the roost, and they target toms more often than hens. A predatory owl will typically use their talons to grab toms by the neck and descend to the ground, often 20 yards or more from the roost site, leaving a trail of feathers from the roost tree. This might be because a tom is so heavy that an owl has to make a controlled descent nearby. Barred owls and turkeys are not typically considered enemies.
If you want to learn how to replicate the call of a barred owl with your own voice, you’ll need to listen to real barred owls and practice a lot. Start by listening to owls in the woods or on YouTube, and imitating the simplest version of their call. Start with lone hoots and work your way up to the who-cooks-for-you sequence. Once you hit the right pitch, you should be able to get owls and turkeys to respond to you as if you were a real owl. If you never learn to imitate an owl’s screech (it sounds almost like a monkey), don’t worry — many turkey hunters don’t use that screech, and they don’t need it, either.
While turkeys do indeed gobble in response to barred owls, research indicates that lots of sounds within a certain frequency range can elicit a shock gobble from a tom. Those sounds include thunder, the boom of construction noise, crow calls, owl calls, goose calls, and much more. Still, sometimes there’s no sound in the world that can get a turkey to gobble when he’s decided to shut up. So just because a turkey isn’t gobbling — at a wild barred owl or your own owl hoot — doesn’t mean he isn’t there.
The post Why Do Turkeys Gobble at Owls? appeared first on Outdoor Life.
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