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  2. Common gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_gull

    The common gull (Larus canus) is a medium-sized gull that breeds in cool temperate regions of the Palearctic from Iceland and Scotland east to Kamchatka in the Russian Far East. Most common gulls migrate further south in winter, reaching the Mediterranean Sea, the southern Caspian Sea, and the seas around China and Japan; northwest European ...

  3. Gulls of Europe, Asia and North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulls_of_Europe,_Asia_and...

    Gulls of Europe, Asia and North America by Klaus Malling Olsen and Hans Larsson is a volume in the Helm Identification Guides series of bird identification books.. The book is intended to succeed Peter J. Grant's Gulls: A Guide to Identification as the standard identification work on Northern Hemisphere gulls.

  4. Gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gull

    White-winged gull is used to describe the four pale-winged, high Arctic-breeding taxa within the former group; these are Iceland gull, glaucous gull, Thayer's gull, and Kumlien's gull. In common usage, members of various gull species are often referred to as 'sea gulls' or 'seagulls'; however, this is a layperson's term and is not used by most ...

  5. European herring gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_herring_gull

    The European herring gull (Larus argentatus) is a large gull, up to 66 cm (26 in) long. [2] It breeds throughout the northern and western coasts of Europe. Some European herring gulls, especially those resident in colder areas, migrate further south in winter, but many are permanent residents, such as in Ireland, Britain, Iceland, or on the North Sea shores.

  6. American herring gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_herring_gull

    The American herring gull or Smithsonian gull (Larus smithsonianus or Larus argentatus smithsonianus) is a large gull that breeds in North America, where it is treated by the American Ornithological Society as a subspecies of herring gull (L. argentatus). Adults are white with gray back and wings, black wingtips with white spots, and pink legs.

  7. Iceland gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iceland_gull

    Iceland gull (Larus glaucoides), juvenile, Cley Marshes Close-up of first winter individual.Wethersfield, CT USA. The Iceland gull (Larus glaucoides) is a medium-sized gull that breeds in the Arctic regions of Canada and Greenland, but not in Iceland (as its name suggests), where it is only seen during winter.

  8. Short-billed gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-billed_gull

    The short-billed gull (Larus brachyrhynchus) is a medium-sized species of gull that breeds in northwestern North America. In North America, it was previously known as the mew gull, when it was considered conspecific with the palearctic common gull (Larus canus). Most authorities, including the American Ornithological Society in 2021, have split ...

  9. Hybridisation in gulls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybridisation_in_gulls

    A bird seen in December 2001 at Belhaven Bay, Lothian, and present each winter since (until at least 2005/6) is believed to be a hybrid between black-headed and common gulls. [5] More rarely, hybrids have been reported between laughing gull and black-headed gull, laughing gull and ring-billed gull and possibly black-headed and ring-billed gull ...