Diet Overlap

Pseudoscops clamator (Striped Owl)
Boa constrictor (Boa Constrictor)

Common Diet

Volatinia jacarina (Blue-black Grassquit)

Common Habitat

Apure-Villavicencio dry forests
Atlantic Forest
Bahia coastal forests
Barro Colorado Island
Beni savanna
Caatinga
Campos Rupestres montane savanna
Caribbean Islands
Catatumbo moist forests
Central American Atlantic moist forests
Central American dry forests
Cerrado
Cerrado
Chiquitano dry forests
Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary
Corcovado National Park
Costa Rican seasonal moist forests
Ecuadorian dry forests
Estacion Biologica Beni
Guajira-Barranquilla xeric scrub
Guianan Freshwater swamp forests
Guianan Highlands moist forests
Guianan moist forests
Iquitos varzea
Isthmian-Atlantic moist forests
Isthmian-Pacific moist forests
Lesser Antillean dry forests
Llanos
Maracá Ecological Reserve
Mesoamerica
Napo moist forests
Orinoco Delta swamp forests
Palo Verde National Park
Panamanian dry forests
Pantanal
Paraguana xeric scrub
Pernambuco coastal forests
Petén-Veracruz moist forests
Santa Marta montane forests
Serra do Mar coastal forests
Sierra de los Tuxtlas
Sierra Madre de Chiapas moist forest
Sinú Valley dry forests
Southwest Amazon moist forests
Tropical Andes
Tumbes-Choco-Magdalena
Tumbes-Piura dry forests
Ucayali moist forests
Western Ecuador moist forests

Attributes / relations provided by
1Motta-Junior, JC, C. J R. Alho, and S. C S. Belentani. 2004. Food habits of the Striped Owl Asio clamator in southeast Brazil Pages 777–784 in Raptors worldwide: proceedings of the VI world conference on birds of prey and owls (R. Chancellor and B.-U. Meyburg, Eds.)
2Hábitos alimentares de serpentes em Espigão do Oeste, Rondônia, Brasil, Paulo Sérgio Bernarde & Augusto Shinya Abe, Biota Neotrop., vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 167-173 (2010)