Herring Gulls in Flight

Anyone who has visited the British or Irish coast has probably encountered these large seabirds. Gulls have a habit of stealing food from tourists and ripping bin bags into pieces.

As I write this, two Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus) sit on the roofline opposite me. They are huge and grow larger when well fed on a diet of chips and ice cream stolen from tourists.

It was my daughter's 10th Birthday Party at the weekend, and after we sat on the beach with fish and chips. Like sharks circling their prey, it didn't take long before the gulls looked for their meal.

Herring Gull takes off from a post

KeyValue
Photographer@richardslater
F-Stopf/4.5
Focal Length105mm
Exposure1/1000 sec
ISO100
CameraSony A6000
LensSony E PZ 18-105mm f/4 G OSS
TakenSaturday, 02 July 2022 13:31

Despite their reputation as flying rodents, Herring Gulls are on the Red List of endangered species. This distressing accolade is due to the global decline in numbers affecting the population's diversity.

Herring gull flies across the horizon

KeyValue
Photographer@richardslater
F-Stopf/4.5
Focal Length105mm
Exposure1/1000 sec
ISO100
CameraSony A6000
LensSony E PZ 18-105mm f/4 G OSS
TakenSaturday, 02 July 2022 13:53

Being endangered doesn't mean we should feed them, though; they can feed themselves and their chicks on fish caught out at sea. Birds need a balanced diet, and, like humans, ice cream and chips aren't a balanced diet.

Herring gull prepares to take flight from a pebble beach

KeyValue
Photographer@richardslater
F-Stopf/4.5
Focal Length105mm
Exposure1/1000 sec
ISO100
CameraSony A6000
LensSony E PZ 18-105mm f/4 G OSS
TakenSaturday, 02 July 2022 13:54

Our waste is also a problem; although less common now, the plastic rings that hold drinks cans together can easily entangle the bird, slowly strangling them or limiting their movement. As a child, I remember cutting this single-use plastic up to avoid impacting sea birds (not just gulls).

A Herring Gull flies overhead

KeyValue
Photographer@richardslater
F-Stopf/4.5
Focal Length105mm
Exposure1/1000 sec
ISO100
CameraSony A6000
LensSony E PZ 18-105mm f/4 G OSS
TakenSaturday, 02 July 2022 13:54

As humans, we can do a lot to protect these vulnerable species, not encouraging them to feed from our waste by taking our rubbish home from the beach, and using wildlife-proof bins helps.

Herring gull flies overhead

KeyValue
Photographer@richardslater
F-Stopf/4.5
Focal Length18mm
Exposure1/1000 sec
ISO100
CameraSony A6000
LensSony E PZ 18-105mm f/4 G OSS
TakenSaturday, 02 July 2022 13:59

Despite the risk of getting your food stolen by these birds, they are beautiful and graceful creatures in the air. I suspect they are quite intelligent as they seem to play in the thermal currents around cliffs; they certainly get inventive trying to get into rubbish bins around here.

I hope you enjoyed my facts and photos, as all work and views are my own. I greatly appreciate it if I have earned your vote, subscription, or follow.

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I really liked your work, beautiful photos of these birds.
As you say, if they are in extinction it is not for us to feed them but to take care that they do not eat tourists' ice creams.
Avoid leaving things that they can ingest and cause them to die.

Thank you :)

We appreciate your work and your post has been manually curated by zoology team (oscurity,nelinoeva) on behalf of Amazing Nature Community. Keep up the good work!

Thank you :)

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I love this and great to see some meta data too. This is like the web used to be!

Thanks, Nick - I often get asked what my settings and gear are so figure I might just include it from the outset. Thanks for dropping by and having a look :)

I want to rekindle my photography properly soon. This isn’t the best time of year. Autumn is my favourite

I've been to the beach a few times this year, and I have been struck by how few seagulls I've seen. My family have been able to eat on the beach without being bothered by them. It's not good that there seem to be so few around. Having said that, I see far more gulls inland than I used to.

Gulls, it seems, are quite adaptable - so they choose to move inland to nest and feed. It's not good for them though as they can't process some of the fats that are found in our food that isn't in their normal diet. This in turn (no pun intended) means they live a shorter life and have fewer offspring. It troubles me that there are all of these signs that our ecosystem is collapsing and yet it's hard to be a good steward of our environment. Thanks for your comment as ever :)

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