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SFBBO Gull Workshop 1 Alvaro Jaramillo

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Why I like gulls? Not sure, but they make me go wow! I just think they are pretty! ... The Inca Tern of the Humboldt Current is a rather gull-like tern! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SFBBO Gull Workshop 1 Alvaro Jaramillo


1
SFBBO Gull Workshop 1Alvaro Jaramillo
2
Why I like gulls? Not sure, but they make me go
wow!
3
I just think they are pretty!
4
I just think they are pretty!But I also like the
element of the unexpected
Chris Gibbins
5
My Aims
  • Teach you the basics of gull ID.
  • Get acquainted with the details of gull ID.
  • Take the fear out and put the fun in!
  • Gull biology - put our gulls in context.

6
The Plan
  • Today
  • Introduce the adult gulls
  • identification concepts.
  • Taxonomy, life history, conservation
  • Ageing
  • Thursday
  • Refresh
  • Molt
  • More on Ageing
  • Young gull plumages
  • Identification challenges
  • Rare Gulls
  • Gull behavior

7
What are Gulls?
  • Charadriiformes
  • Related to shorebirds, Alcids, Terns, Skimmers,
    Skuas etc.
  • Sister group to the Terns.
  • Webbed feet. Strong bills. Long wings, short
    tails.

The Inca Tern of the Humboldt Current is a rather
gull-like tern!
8
White-headed Gull species Larus
  • Western
  • Glaucous-winged
  • California
  • Herring
  • Thayers
  • Glaucous
  • Ring-billed
  • Mew
  • Heermanns

9
Hooded Species - Leucophaeus
  • Franklins Gull
  • Laughing Gull
  • Others in Latin America

10
Masked Species - Chroicocephalus
  • Bonapartes
  • Black-headed
  • Others in Asia, Europe, South America, Africa.

11
Arctic Gulls, Kittiwakes, etc.
  • Sabines Gull and Ivory Gull (Xema and Pagophila)
  • Kittiwakes (Rissa)
  • Little Gull (and Rosss) Hydrocoleus

12
The regular gullsin extremely rough order of
abundance
Green Winter only
  • California
  • Western
  • Glaucous-winged
  • Ring-billed
  • Herring
  • Mew
  • Heermanns
  • Bonapartes
  • Thayers
  • Glaucous

13
Uncommon, Rare, and ultra-rare!more details next
class.
  • The regular ones
  • Black-legged Kittiwake
  • Franklins Gull
  • Sabines Gull
  • The rare ones
  • Slaty-backed Gull
  • Vega Gull
  • Little Gull
  • Lesser Black-backed Gull
  • Iceland Gull
  • Black-headed Gull
  • Laughing Gull

14
Why are gulls so difficult?
  • Complex aging
  • Variable
  • Wearing and bleaching
  • Constantly changing (molt)
  • Hybrids

For some this is what makes them fun!
15
Ring-billed Gull - Adult
16
Ring-billed Gull 2nd year
17
Ring-billed Gull 1st Year
18
Variability
19
Wearing and Bleaching
20
Constantly changing - molt
21
HybridsBeware these are common in winter.
22
Parts of the Gull - Flight
Learn your chicken bone!
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The chicken bone again!
29
..and again!
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Parts of the gull standing and flying
34
Gull Lingo Mirrors, Tongues and Trailing
Edge
35
Gull Lingo Gonys, Gonydeal Angle and
Orbital Ring
36
What you look at?
  • Shape size (bulgy bill, long wings, slim, fat,
    thick-necked, bulky)
  • Mantle color (relative)
  • Primaries
  • Leg color
  • Eye color
  • Streaking pattern

37
Impression
38
Other Issues
  • Lighting
  • Uncertainty you just never know. And that is
    fine!

39
Lighting overcast better than sun.
40
What the ???
41
Identification Intro adult White-headed Gulls.
  • California
  • Ring-billed
  • Mew
  • Western
  • Glaucous-winged
  • Herring
  • Thayers
  • Glaucous
  • Heermanns

42
California Gull - Adult
43
California Gull - Adult
44
California Gull - Adult
45
Ring-billed Gull - Adult
46
Ring-billed Gull - Adult
47
Mew Gull - Adult
48
Mew Gull - Adult
49
Ring-billed vs. Mew Gull
50
Western Gull - Adult
51
Western Gull - Adult
52
Western Gull - Adult
53
Glaucous-winged Gull Adult
54
Glaucous-winged Gull - Adult
55
Glaucous-winged Gull - Adult
56
Glaucous-winged Gull - Adult
57
Herring Gull - Adult
58
Herring Gull - Adult
59
California Gull - Adult
60
Herring Gull - Adult
61
Thayers Gull - Adult
62
Thayers Gull - Adult
63
Thayers Gull 3d cycle
64
Thayers Gull - Adult
65
Thayers Gull - Adult
66
Thayers Kumliens - Iceland
67
Thayers and Smith
  • Neal Smith showed that Kumliens and Thayers
    gulls reproductively Isolated
  • Richard Snell tried to replicate.
  • data on gulls at Home Bay could not have been
    based on actual observations or experimentation.
  • Data on the composition of pairs of courting
    plovers (Smith 1969 table 2) in Home Bay were
    evidently not based on actual observations, as
    Smith had not yet arrived in Home Bay at the time
    those data were reportedly collected.

68
Glaucous Gull - Adult
69
Glaucous-winged Gull - Adult
70
Heermanns Gull - Adult
71
Heermanns Gull - Adult
72
Identification practice
73
Identification practice
74
Identification practice
75
Identification practice
76
Identification practice
77
Identification practice
78
Identification Intro The small guys
  • Bonapartes Gull
  • Sabines Gull
  • Black-legged Kittiwake

79
Bonapartes Gull - Adult
Steve Metz
80
Bonapartes Gull First Cycle
81
More on the other small ones next time!
George Armistead
82
CLADES - GULL PHYLOGENY - Crochet et al. 1999
83
White-headed Gull species Larus
  • Western
  • Glaucous-winged
  • California
  • Herring
  • Thayers
  • Glaucous
  • Ring-billed
  • Mew
  • Heermanns

84
Hooded Species - Leucophaeus
  • Franklins Gull
  • Laughing Gull
  • Others in Latin America

85
Masked Species - Chroicocephalus
  • Bonapartes
  • Black-headed
  • Others in Asia, Europe, South America, Africa.

86
Arctic Gulls, Kittiwakes, etc.
  • Sabines Gull and Ivory Gull (Xema and Pagophila)
  • Kittiwakes (Rissa)
  • Little Gull (and Rosss) Hydrocoleus

87
Splits and lumps White-headed Gulls
  • White-headed Gulls. Pons et al. 2005
  • European and Smithsonian gulls will be split.
  • Uncertainty over Vega it should be split from
    European Herring as well?
  • Thayers Iceland??
  • Western Glaucous-winged (not closely related!)

88
Liebers et al. 2004. Herring Gull not a Ring
Species.
  • Original model.
  • One refugium.
  • Eventually smithsonianus re-invades Europe and
    contacts Lesser Black-backed.
  • All wrong!

89
Liebers et al. 2004. Herring Gull not a Ring
Species.
  • New data
  • Two refugia.
  • Atlantic and Aralo Caspian.
  • No invasion of Herring Gulls from North America.

90
Gulls and Environmental concerns
  • They feed in dumps is this good, is this bad?
  • Vectors for disease, avian or human?
  • High E. coli levels in Half Moon Bay beaches
    what is the root cause?
  • Dieoffs of gulls roosting in Half Moon Bay in
    03-04.

91
California Gull in Bay Area
  • 21,200 in 7 colonies in 2003
  • Amazing population boom since the 80s.
  • Dumps to blame?
  • Largest colony in a dry salt pond.
  • Salt Marsh Restoration will flood most Bay Area
    breeders.
  • Where will they go?
  • Will they be a larger problem on Snowy Plover?

92
Life History TheoryA framework for understanding
key characteristics in the life cycle.
  • Resources, time are finite
  • Trade-offs
  • Different allocation of resources (time, energy)
  • Ex many young, short life, quick maturation VS.
    few young, long life, slow maturation.
  • Examples in the gulls?
  • Molt, migration breeding.
  • Molt timing, first cycle.
  • Large vs small size.
  • Arctic vs. mid latitude juveniles.

93
Life history theory in practice
94
Life history theory in practice
95
Life history theory in practice
96
Life history theory in practice
97
Molt and migration
  • Southern Hemisphere wintering range.
  • Complete molt in winter.
  • Franklins molts wings twice in a year!

98
Migration - examples
  • Western Gull, north and south.
  • Glaucous-winged Gull, south.
  • California Gull, west and south.
  • Franklins Gull, Neotropical.
  • Sabines Gull, Neotropical.

99
Migration Franklins Gull
100
Heermanns Gull all upside down
101
Gull AgesCycles why I like them
  • Simplifies
  • From one complete molt to the next
  • Makes it easier to compare between species.

102
How many cycles? 2-3 and 4 Year (Cycle) Gulls.
  • Four Year Gulls
  • All the big ones and
  • Heermanns
  • Two Year Gulls
  • Bonapartes
  • Sabines
  • Kittiwakes
  • Three Year Gulls
  • Ring-billed
  • Mew
  • Franklins

103
So maturation relates to size!
104
Ageing techniques
  • Know the start and end points
  • Primary shape
  • Tails and wings can get blacker
  • Eyes, bills etc
  • Brown wings versus adult wings
  • Inner primaries.

105
Start and end points (Anchors)
Adult
Juvenile
California Gull
106
Juveniles a special case why?
107
California Gull Juvenile starting molt. August.
108
Primary shape
Pointed juvenile primaries
Rounded older ages
Glaucous-winged Gull
109
Primary shape
Pointed juvenile primaries
Rounded older ages
Glaucous-winged Gull
110
Primary shape
Pointed juvenile primaries
Rounded older ages
California Gull
111
Brown to Black
First Cycle
Second Cycle
112
Brown vs. Adult wingsThe inner primaries are key
Second Cycle
Third Cycle
113
Soft Part Colors
  • Yellow eyed species tend to get the yellow eyes
    in the second cycle.
  • Bills become pale from the base.
  • Pink or yellow bill bases?

114
Hormones and feather color
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