Herring
gull (Larus argentatus)
General
information
Herring gulls are big
seabirds, 50 to 70 cm in body length and up to 150 cm in wingspan. It takes
them four years to mature, and they can live up to 30 years. The plumage of the
adult male and female is identical; however, males are usually bigger. The
juvenile herrings gull’s plumage starts out as mottled brown, and gradually
develops into the adult bird’s white and grey plumage.
Herring gulls are
breeding as well as wintering on Merseyside, so we can see them the whole year
round as they do not migrate to warmer climates. They regularly reside near
ponds in Sefton Park and Princes Park, as well as on the tidal flats of the River
Mersey during low tide, which is where they forage most often. They also like
to forage on open, green spaces like parks or farmlands where they can easily
detect predators. Urban gulls, during the breeding period, prefer to build
their nests on high buildings or houses, as it is easier for them to find
discarded food near human dwellings. They often sit on buildings in the city
centre and wait for the opportunity to feed on human refuse, which is very
often easier to acquire than their natural food.
Appearance
Adults
The adult herring gull’s
head is white during the summer breeding period; during the winter, it changes
to white with grey streaks. Their beak is yellow with a red dot at the tip.
Adult gulls have a very pale iris with black speckling. The ring around their
eyes, called the orbital ring, may vary
from yellow to a pale orange colour.
The adult’s wings are
light grey on top, paler beneath, and have black tips with white spots or
‘mirrors’, as they are known. When they are stationary and they put their wings
together, it gives the illusion of a grey ‘back’. Their neck, belly and bottom
are completely white. Herring gulls have long, pink legs; however, some
subspecies can have slightly yellow legs, and, the yellow-legged gull (Larus michahellis) was once considered to be a race of herring gull.
Juveniles
Juvenile herring gulls have grey and brown plumage, and each year their plumage develops a little to become the silver grey back and white neck/underparts of the adult bird. Their bills are mainly black during the first year, and go through a similar development to their plumage so that, by the fourth year, the birds have the adult’s yellow beak with red spot. Their eyes are almost completely black with no distinguishable orbital ring colour. Between the 3rd and 4th year moult, their iris becomes paler and the eye develops the orbital ring. Their legs are pale pink. After the 4th summer, they are sexually mature adults.
Juvenile herring gulls have grey and brown plumage, and each year their plumage develops a little to become the silver grey back and white neck/underparts of the adult bird. Their bills are mainly black during the first year, and go through a similar development to their plumage so that, by the fourth year, the birds have the adult’s yellow beak with red spot. Their eyes are almost completely black with no distinguishable orbital ring colour. Between the 3rd and 4th year moult, their iris becomes paler and the eye develops the orbital ring. Their legs are pale pink. After the 4th summer, they are sexually mature adults.
Herring gull 1st winter. Photo credit: ©2015 Jonathon Woolf
|
Herring gull 2nd winter.
Photo credit: Charles J Sharp
Sharp
Photography, sharpphotography, CC BY-SA 4.0,
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=51991783
|
Herring gull 3rd winter.
Photo credit: ©2015 Jonathon Woolf
|
Herring gull breeding adult. Photo
credit: ©2015 Jonathon Woolf
|
Lesser
black-backed gull (Larus fuscus)
General
information
Lesser black-backed and herring
gulls belong to the same genus, Larus;
therefore, they are quite similar. In fact, for a long time scientists thought
they were the same species. The lesser black-backed gull’s body is between 50 and
60 cm long, and their wingspan is up to 140 cm; they are slightly smaller than herring
gulls, and their wings are a darker grey. They also take four years to mature; and
the juveniles’ plumage is again browner and more mottled than the adults’. Similar
to the herring gulls, the plumage of male and female lesser black-backed gulls is
the same; the only visible difference between the sexes is that males are
bigger than females. These gulls come to Merseyside mostly for the duration of
the breeding period, from April until August; during the winter months they used
to migrate – mostly to African countries – but some birds now stay here
year-round. Similar to the herring gulls, lesser black-backed gulls forage on
uncovered tidal flats of the River Mersey, parks and farmlands. Additionally,
gulls living in urban areas like Liverpool often forage on human refuse, and
can be seen in our city centre and other areas where humans or their refuse
congregate.
Appearance
Adults
The adult lesser
black-backed gull’s head is completely white, the eyes are pale yellow with a
red eye ring, and their beak is yellow with a red dot at the end. Their wings are slaty grey, with the exception of
small white spots or ‘mirrors’ on the wingtips, similar to the herring gull.
Their neck, belly and bottom are completely white. Lesser black-backed gulls
have slender, yellow legs. Adults again have a pale iris with speckling; females
usually have more speckles than males. The colour of their orbital ring ranges
from dark orange to bright red.
In their winter plumage, they have the
‘streaky’ head and neck of the herring gull.
Juveniles
Juvenile lesser
black-backed gulls have grey and brown plumage, and each year their plumage
develops a little to become the dark grey back and white neck/underparts of the
adult bird. Their bills are black during the first year, and go through a
similar development to their plumage so that, by the fourth year, the birds
have the adult’s yellow beak with red spot. The juvenile’s iris is black,
similar to that of juvenile herring gulls. During the first three years, their
orbital ring is no different in colour than the rest of the plumage on their
head. After the 3rd moult (sometimes it happens earlier), their eyes
grow lighter and their orbital ring becomes a red colour. Their legs are pale
pink at first, which gradually changes to yellow as the bird matures. After
their 4th summer, they are adults.
Lesser Black-backed gull 1st
winter. Photo credit: Don Faulkner
|
Lesser Black-backed gull 2nd
winter. Photo credit: Don Faulkner
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/deed.en |
Lesser black-backed gull 3rd winter. Photo credit: Cassia Tofano |
Lesser black-backed gull breeding
adult. Photo credit: Jason Leung
|
Edited by Debra Williams