The black-headed gull (Chroicocephalus ridibundus) is a small gull that breeds in much of the Palearctic in Europe and Asia, and also locally in smaller numbers in coastal eastern Canada. Most of the population is migratory and winters further south, but many also remain in the milder areas of northwestern Europe. It was formerly sometimes cited as "common black-headed gull" to distinguish it from "great black-headed gull" (an old name for Pallas's gull).
Black-headed gull | |
---|---|
Adult summer plumage | |
Adult winter plumage | |
Conservation status | |
Least Concern (IUCN 3.1) | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Charadriiformes |
Family: | Laridae |
Genus: | Chroicocephalus |
Species: | C. ridibundus |
Binomial name | |
Chroicocephalus ridibundus (Linnaeus, 1766) | |
Distribution: Breeding summer visitor Breeding resident Non-breeding passage migrant Non-breeding winter visitor Vagrant records | |
Synonyms | |
Larus ridibundus Linnaeus, 1766 |
The black-headed gull was previously placed in the genus Larus but genetic studies early in the 21st century showed that this genus in a wide sense like this was paraphyletic with respect to other gull genera, and extensive changes to the taxonomy of gulls were made with many species of gull removed from Larus and transferred to other genera; the black-headed gull joining nine or ten other species in the resurrected genus Chroicocephalus; this was accepted by the IOC World Bird List and other ornithological authorities in 2008.
The genus name Chroicocephalus is from the Ancient Greek words khroizo, "to colour", and kephale, "head". The specific name ridibundus is Latin for "laughing a lot".
Description
This gull is 34–39 cm (13+1⁄2–15+1⁄2 in) long with a 100–110 cm (39+1⁄2–43+1⁄2 in) wingspan and weighs 166–400 g (5+7⁄8–14+1⁄8 oz); males (186–400 g) average heavier than females (166–350 g), but with considerable overlap.
In flight, the white leading edge of the outer wing (the outer primaries) is a good field mark, particularly combined with the dark underside of the inner primaries, which distinguishes it from the white underside of those feathers in its close relative the Bonaparte's gull. The summer adult has a chocolate-brown head (not black, although does look black from a distance), white neck, underparts and tail, pale grey wings and back, black tips to the primary wing feathers, and red bill and legs. The hood is lost in winter, leaving just two dark spots above and behind the eye. Summer plumage occurs from March to July (rarely from late January, and into August), winter plumage from late July until March or April. Black-headed gulls take two years to reach maturity. Juvenile birds, for the first month or two after fledging, have a mottled pattern of brown spots over most of the body, and a black band on the tail; in late summer, they moult into first-winter plumage, with a grey back, but retaining a brown carpal bar on the inner wing, blackish secondary feathers, and the black band on the tail. In their first summer (one year old), they develop a partial brown hood, the extent of which is very variable between individuals from almost no brown on the head, to a hood like a full adult's. The second winter plumage is like adult plumage, except for occasional brown marks on the wings and tail tip in some individuals. There is no difference in plumage between the sexes.
It breeds in colonies in large reed beds or marshes, or on islands in lakes, nesting on the ground; colonies may range from a few (or even single) pairs up to several thousand pairs, exceptionally over 10,000 pairs. Like most gulls, it is highly gregarious in winter, both when feeding and in evening roosts. It is not a pelagic species and is rarely seen at sea far from coasts.
Like most gulls, black-headed gulls are long-lived birds, with a maximum age of at least 32.9 years recorded in the wild.
Subspecies
Some authorities treat it as a monotypic species with no subspecies, while others treat it as having two subspecies, C. r. ridibundus in the west and centre of the range, and C. r. sibiricus in the far east (eastern Siberia; wintering in Japan and eastern China). The latter is slightly larger and relatively longer-winged. The variation is likely clinal, with intergrades in central Siberia.
Distribution
Black-headed gulls breed across the Palearctic over much of Europe and northern Asia, from Iceland and Ireland east to Japan and eastern China. It is abundant, with a global population of 2–3 million pairs; most numerous in Europe, with up to 300,000 pairs in Great Britain and 250,000 pairs in Poland the largest concentrations. The range is slowly expanding westwards, with Iceland first colonised in 1911, Greenland in 1969, and Newfoundland in Canada in 1977, with around 20 pairs breeding in northeastern Canada in the late 20th century. They migrate south and west away from regions which freeze hard in winter, reaching northern Africa and southern Asia (with small numbers south to the Equator). Areas within the breeding range with milder winters such as Great Britain receive large influxes of migrants from colder areas like Scandinavia, Poland, the Baltic States, and Russia; the British winter population is around 3 million. Small numbers occur in winter in northeast North America as far south as Virginia, often in flocks of the similar-looking Bonaparte's gull.
Vagrancy
South of its regular range in eastern North America, it is recorded as a very rare transient south to the Carolina coast, and also in some Caribbean islands and Mexico. There are a few records from Australia, the first on 19 October 1991, at Broome, Western Australia, and others at Darwin, Northern Territory in 1998, 2005, and 2006. It is also a vagrant south in Africa as far as the Pretoria area in South Africa.
Disease
Black-headed gulls were among the birds most heavily hit by the 2023 avian influenza outbreak, with over 4,000 birds killed in Great Britain by early May; similarly high mortality rates were also reported from France, the Netherlands, Italy and Germany.
Behaviour
The black-headed gull is a bold and opportunistic feeder. It eats insects, fish, seeds, worms, scraps, and carrion in towns, or invertebrates in ploughed fields with equal facility. It is a noisy species, especially in colonies, with a familiar "kree-ar" call.
It displays a variety of behaviour and adaptations. Some of these include removing eggshells from the nest after hatching, begging co-ordination between siblings, differences between sexes, conspecific brood parasitism, and extra-pair paternity. They are found in a variety of different habitats.
Breeding
Eggshell removal
Eggshell removal is a behaviour seen in birds once the chicks have hatched, observed mostly to reduce risk of predation. Removing the eggshell acts as a way of camouflage to avoid predators seeing the nest. The further away egg shells are from the nest, the lower the predation risk. Black-headed gull eggs experience predation from different species of birds, foxes, stoats, and even other black-headed gulls. Although mothers show some form of aggressiveness when a predator is near, in the first 30 minutes, wet chicks can be easily taken by other black-headed gulls after hatching when the parents of the wet chick are distracted.
Black headed gulls also carry away other objects that do not belong in the nest. The removal of eggshells and other objects is important not only in the incubation period but also during the first few days after the eggs hatch. However, the removal process seems to increase as time goes on. The removal is done by both the male and female parents, normally lasts a few seconds and is done three times a year.
A black-headed gull is able to differentiate an egg shell from an egg by acknowledging its thin, serrated, white, edge; the weight of the egg or eggshell does not play a role when determining its value.
Earlier hypotheses have attempted to explain the survival value of black-headed gulls removing their eggshells from the nest, including:
- The sharp edges of the shells after hatching could harm the chicks
- The eggshell could somehow intrude during the brooding
- The eggshell could slip over the unhatched egg, creating a double shell
- Some of the moist organic material left from the shell could lead to a production of bacteria and mould
Begging coordination between siblings
Black-headed gulls feed their young by regurgitating onto the ground, rather than into each chick one at a time. The parents tend to accommodate their regurgitation amounts for how intense the nest begging is, from both an individual chick or a group of chicks begging together. Chicks who are siblings, have learned this behaviour and begin synchronising their begging signals to decrease the costs as an individual and increase the benefits as a whole. The rate of parental food regurgitation to chicks increases with begging intensity.
The amount and response of begging signals differs throughout the nestling period. Usually, there are 3–5 begging events/hour, each lasting around one minute. High intensity begging behaviour appears at the end of the first week in the nest, but the coordination between multiple chicks emerge during the last week of the nestling period. The more siblings present, the more they coordinate their begging while decreasing the number of begging.
Sex differences
Male chicks have less of a chance of survival when compared to female chicks. Black-headed gulls are a sexually size-dimorphic species, so the larger sex is at a disadvantage when the amount of food sources are low.
Male birds are more likely to be born in the first egg and female birds are more likely to be born in the third. The position of a female black-headed gull in response to the food available when laying the eggs can predict the offspring's characteristics.
Conspecific brood parasitism
Conspecific brood parasitism is a behaviour that occurs when females lay their eggs in another female's nest, of the same species. It can reduce the cost of incubation and nestling young by passing it on to another bird. Black-headed gulls usually lay three egg clutches, and the first two are normally larger than the third. The third egg normally has the lowest survival rate, while the first or second are usually the parasitic eggs.
Most of the egg dumping occurs within the beginning of the egg laying period. The parasitic eggs being laid in another conspecific's nest increases the chance of hatching and may occur because of nest desertion or a nest being taken over by another bird.
Multiple eggs in a nest from different mothers may also result from intra-specific nest parasitism, joint female nesting, and nest takeover. Intra-specific nest parasitism is a disadvantage to the hosts because the female could end up taking care of the parasitic chicks over her own and therefore neglecting them and reducing their fitness. Another disadvantage for the host is that incubating more chicks than their own takes up more energy.
Extra-pair paternity
The rate of extra-pair paternity (EPP) has a large variation between populations of black-headed gulls. It is primarily a context-dependent strategy, meaning not all black headed gulls experience this behaviour. The variation between populations of extra-pair paternity can be explained by the variation it has on the advantages and disadvantages it has on a female, as well, as the variation in pressure on a females choice.
The differences in the rate of EPP may be determined by multiple different factors: life history traits, ecological factors or different behavioural strategies of males.
Central–periphery gradient within colonies
Egg-laying can be earlier in Black-headed Gulls nesting in the centre of the colony, with central pairs tending to lay larger eggs, which have a higher hatching success, than pairs nesting at the periphery of the colony. Centrally nesting individuals have also been found to be in better condition and have higher genetic quality.
Walking displays
Black-headed gulls display both head-bobbing walking (HBW) and non-bobbing walking (NBW). Head-bobbing walking is expressed by a hold phase and a thrust phase. The hold phase in black-headed gulls occurs mainly during the single support phase and is when the bird balances its head to equal the environment. Head-bobbing walking occurs during a seeking type foraging by walking through water and includes benefits such as enhancing motion and pattern detection and gathering depth information from motion parallax during the thrust phase. Non-bobbing walking occurs when black-headed gulls are displaying a waiting behaviour while foraging on flat surfaces.
Synchronisation
Observations on the behaviour of black-headed gulls show that individuals synchronise their vigilance activity with other neighbouring black-headed gulls. Synchronisation in black-headed gulls groups is dependent on the distance between the individuals.
Uses
The eggs of the black-headed gull were considered a delicacy by some in the UK and eaten hard boiled. The collection of black-headed gull eggs is heavily regulated by the UK government. Eggs may only be taken by a small number of licensed individuals at six sites between 1 April and 15 May each year and only a single egg may be taken from each nest. No eggs are permitted to be sold after 30 June. As the gulls tend to lay in late April and early May, the eggs are only available to purchase for 3 or 4 weeks per year.
In popular culture
The black-headed gull is the official bird of Tokyo, Japan, and the Yurikamome automated guideway transit in Tokyo Bay is named after it.
In Richard Adams' 1972 novel Watership Down, a black-headed gull named Kehaar (who claims his name is the onomatopoeia of waves breaking against the shore) plays a major part in the story. Injured by a farm cat and left behind during the seasonal migration, Kehaar finds himself stranded on the Downs and is taken in by a warren of rabbits. He later becomes their friend and ally, and helps to save the rabbits from danger many times; instincts eventually force him to return to his colony, but he promises to visit the rabbits each winter. True to Adams' stated intentions of trying to keep their behaviour close to reality, Kehaar is characterised as intelligent, gregarious, noisy, messy, and impatient, and with a guttural accent. Kehaar appears in all three screen adaptations of the novel; the character was voiced by Zero Mostel in the 1978 film, Rik Mayall in the 1999 TV series, and Peter Capaldi in the 2018 miniseries.
Gallery
- Eggs, Collection Museum Wiesbaden, Germany
- Chroicocephalus ridibundus, Radès sea, Tunisia
- mating
- nesting and with chicks
- Ringing a black-headed gull nestling
- Adult winter plumage in St James's Park, London
- Adult breeding plumage
- Juvenile plumage
- In flight
- Juvenile at Farmoor Reservoir, Oxfordshire
- At Farmoor Reservoir, Oxfordshire
- First winter plumage, at Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire
- In flight near Großenbrode, Schleswig-Holstein; the bird is in a near-vertical position
- From Navi Mumbai, India
- Ringed adult in summer
- Juvenile first winter
- Black-headed gulls foraging on insects
- Black-headed gull standing on ice in , Oulu, Finland
References
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- IOC World Bird List – 2008 archive
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- Newman, Kenneth (1998). Newman's birds of Southern Africa. Halfway House: Southern Book Publ. p. 52. ISBN 1-86812-757-5.
- Trust, British (15 May 2023). "Wave of avian influenza hitting Black-headed Gulls". BTO - British Trust for Ornithology. Retrieved 3 January 2025.
- Scott, Paul; Duncan, Peter; Green, Jonathan A. (2 January 2015). "Food preference of the Black-headed Gull Chroicocephalus ridibundus differs along a rural–urban gradient". Bird Study. 62 (1): 56–63. Bibcode:2015BirdS..62...56S. doi:10.1080/00063657.2014.984655. ISSN 0006-3657. S2CID 84645998.
- Tinbergen, N.; Broekhuysen, G.J.; Feekes, F.; Houghton, J.C.W.; Kruuk, H.; Szulc, E. (1962). "Egg shell removal by the Black-headed Gull Larus ridibundus L.; A Behaviour Component of Camouflage". Behaviour. 19 (1/2 (1962)): 71–117. doi:10.1163/156853961X00213. ISSN 0005-7959.
- Houghton, J.C.W.; Feekes, F.; Broekhuysen, G.J.; Tinbergen, N.; Szulc, E.; Kruuk, H. (1962). "Egg Shell Removal By the Black-headed Gull, Larus ridibundus L.; a Behaviour Component of Camouflage". Behaviour. 19 (1–2): 74–116. doi:10.1163/156853961x00213. ISSN 0005-7959.
- Beer, C.G. (1963). "Incubation and Nest-Building Behaviour of Black-headed Gulls Iv: Nest-Building in the Laying and Incubation Periods". Behaviour. 21 (3–4): 155–176. doi:10.1163/156853963x00158. ISSN 0005-7959.
- Blanc, Alain; Ogier, Nicolas; Roux, Angélique; Denizeau, Sébastien; Mathevon, Nicolas (2010). "Begging coordination between siblings in Black-headed Gulls". Comptes Rendus Biologies. 333 (9): 688–693. doi:10.1016/j.crvi.2010.06.002. ISSN 1631-0691. PMID 20816649.
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- MULLER, WENDT; GROOTHUIS, TON G. G.; EISING, CORINE M.; DIJKSTRA, COR (2005). "An experimental study on the causes of sex-biased mortality in the black-headed gull – the possible role of testosterone" (PDF). Journal of Animal Ecology. 74 (4): 735–741. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2656.2005.00964.x. ISSN 0021-8790.
- Lezalova, Radka; Tkadlec, Emil; Obornik, Miroslav; Simek, Jaroslav; Honza, Marcel (7 September 2005). "Should males come first? The relationship between offspring hatching order and sex in the black-headed gull Larus ridibundus". Journal of Avian Biology: 060118052425010––. doi:10.1111/j.2005.0908-8857.03466.x (inactive 24 November 2024). ISSN 0908-8857.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link) - Duda, Norbert; Chętnicki, Włodzimierz (2012). "Conspecific Brood Parasitism is Biased Towards Relatives in the Common Black-headed Gull". Ardea. 100 (1): 63–70. doi:10.5253/078.100.0110. ISSN 0373-2266. S2CID 86227635.
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- Waldeck, Peter; Andersson, Malte (2006). "Brood Parasitism and Nest Takeover in Common Eiders". Ethology. 112 (6): 616–624. Bibcode:2006Ethol.112..616W. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.2005.01187.x. ISSN 0179-1613.
- Duda, Norbert; Chętnicki, Wlodzimierz; Waldeck, Peter; Andersson, Malte (7 January 2008). "Multiple maternity in black-headed gull Larus ridibundus clutches as revealed by protein fingerprinting". Journal of Avian Biology: 080205233540538–0. doi:10.1111/j.2007.0908-8857.04111.x (inactive 24 November 2024). ISSN 0908-8857.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link) - Indykiewicz, Piotr; Podlaszczuk, Patrycja; Minias, Piotr (2017). "Extra-pair paternity in the black-headed gull: is it exceptional among colonial waterbirds?". Behaviour. 154 (11): 1081–1099. doi:10.1163/1568539x-00003459. ISSN 0005-7959.
- Petrie, Marion; Kempenaers, Bart (1998). "Extra-pair paternity in birds: explaining variation between species and populations". Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 13 (2): 52–58. Bibcode:1998TEcoE..13...52P. doi:10.1016/s0169-5347(97)01232-9. ISSN 0169-5347. PMID 21238200.
- Indykiewicz, P.; Podlaszczuk, P.; Kamiński, M.; Włodarczyk, R.; Minias, P. (2019). "Central–periphery gradient of individual quality within a colony of Black-headed Gulls". Ibis. 161 (4): 744–758. doi:10.1111/ibi.12689. S2CID 91379509.
- Fujita, Masaki (24 January 2006). "Head-bobbing and non-bobbing walking of black-headed gulls (Larus ridibundus)". Journal of Comparative Physiology A. 192 (5): 481–488. doi:10.1007/s00359-005-0083-4. ISSN 0340-7594. PMID 16432727. S2CID 23321265.
- Evans, Madeleine H. R.; Lihou, Katie L.; Rands, Sean A. (2 July 2018). "Black-headed gulls synchronise their activity with their nearest neighbours" (PDF). Scientific Reports. 8 (1). doi:10.1038/s41598-018-28378-x. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 6028586. PMID 29967446. Retrieved 3 January 2025.
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{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - Adams, Richard. "Chapter 23: Kehaar". Watership Down, Puffin Books, 1973. ISBN 0-14-030601-3.
- Adams, Richard. "Chapter 38: The Thunder Breaks". Watership Down, Puffin Books, 1973. ISBN 0-14-030601-3.
- Adams, Richard. "Chapter 40: The Way Back". Watership Down, Puffin Books, 1973. ISBN 0-14-030601-3.
External links
- Black-headed gull stamps from many countries[usurped] at bird-stamps.org[usurped]
- Ageing and sexing (PDF; 2.0 MB) by Javier Blasco-Zumeta & Gerd-Michael Heinze
- Feathers of Black-headed Gull (Larus ridibundus) at Ornithos.de Archived 4 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine
- BirdLife species factsheet for Larus ridibundus
- Interactive range map of Larus ridibundus at IUCN Red List
- Audio recordings of Black-headed gull on Xeno-canto.
- Chroicocephalus ridibundus in Field Guide: Birds of the World on Flickr
- Article with video about Black-headed Gull at avibirds.com
The black headed gull Chroicocephalus ridibundus is a small gull that breeds in much of the Palearctic in Europe and Asia and also locally in smaller numbers in coastal eastern Canada Most of the population is migratory and winters further south but many also remain in the milder areas of northwestern Europe It was formerly sometimes cited as common black headed gull to distinguish it from great black headed gull an old name for Pallas s gull Black headed gullAdult summer plumageAdult winter plumage source source Colony sounds Suffolk EnglandConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder CharadriiformesFamily LaridaeGenus ChroicocephalusSpecies C ridibundusBinomial nameChroicocephalus ridibundus Linnaeus 1766 Distribution Breeding summer visitor Breeding resident Non breeding passage migrant Non breeding winter visitor Vagrant recordsSynonymsLarus ridibundus Linnaeus 1766 source source source source source source source source Adults and immatures with winter plumage in Japan The black headed gull was previously placed in the genus Larus but genetic studies early in the 21st century showed that this genus in a wide sense like this was paraphyletic with respect to other gull genera and extensive changes to the taxonomy of gulls were made with many species of gull removed from Larus and transferred to other genera the black headed gull joining nine or ten other species in the resurrected genus Chroicocephalus this was accepted by the IOC World Bird List and other ornithological authorities in 2008 The genus name Chroicocephalus is from the Ancient Greek words khroizo to colour and kephale head The specific name ridibundus is Latin for laughing a lot DescriptionThis gull is 34 39 cm 13 1 2 15 1 2 in long with a 100 110 cm 39 1 2 43 1 2 in wingspan and weighs 166 400 g 5 7 8 14 1 8 oz males 186 400 g average heavier than females 166 350 g but with considerable overlap In flight the white leading edge of the outer wing the outer primaries is a good field mark particularly combined with the dark underside of the inner primaries which distinguishes it from the white underside of those feathers in its close relative the Bonaparte s gull The summer adult has a chocolate brown head not black although does look black from a distance white neck underparts and tail pale grey wings and back black tips to the primary wing feathers and red bill and legs The hood is lost in winter leaving just two dark spots above and behind the eye Summer plumage occurs from March to July rarely from late January and into August winter plumage from late July until March or April Black headed gulls take two years to reach maturity Juvenile birds for the first month or two after fledging have a mottled pattern of brown spots over most of the body and a black band on the tail in late summer they moult into first winter plumage with a grey back but retaining a brown carpal bar on the inner wing blackish secondary feathers and the black band on the tail In their first summer one year old they develop a partial brown hood the extent of which is very variable between individuals from almost no brown on the head to a hood like a full adult s The second winter plumage is like adult plumage except for occasional brown marks on the wings and tail tip in some individuals There is no difference in plumage between the sexes It breeds in colonies in large reed beds or marshes or on islands in lakes nesting on the ground colonies may range from a few or even single pairs up to several thousand pairs exceptionally over 10 000 pairs Like most gulls it is highly gregarious in winter both when feeding and in evening roosts It is not a pelagic species and is rarely seen at sea far from coasts Like most gulls black headed gulls are long lived birds with a maximum age of at least 32 9 years recorded in the wild Subspecies Some authorities treat it as a monotypic species with no subspecies while others treat it as having two subspecies C r ridibundus in the west and centre of the range and C r sibiricus in the far east eastern Siberia wintering in Japan and eastern China The latter is slightly larger and relatively longer winged The variation is likely clinal with intergrades in central Siberia DistributionBlack headed gulls breed across the Palearctic over much of Europe and northern Asia from Iceland and Ireland east to Japan and eastern China It is abundant with a global population of 2 3 million pairs most numerous in Europe with up to 300 000 pairs in Great Britain and 250 000 pairs in Poland the largest concentrations The range is slowly expanding westwards with Iceland first colonised in 1911 Greenland in 1969 and Newfoundland in Canada in 1977 with around 20 pairs breeding in northeastern Canada in the late 20th century They migrate south and west away from regions which freeze hard in winter reaching northern Africa and southern Asia with small numbers south to the Equator Areas within the breeding range with milder winters such as Great Britain receive large influxes of migrants from colder areas like Scandinavia Poland the Baltic States and Russia the British winter population is around 3 million Small numbers occur in winter in northeast North America as far south as Virginia often in flocks of the similar looking Bonaparte s gull Vagrancy South of its regular range in eastern North America it is recorded as a very rare transient south to the Carolina coast and also in some Caribbean islands and Mexico There are a few records from Australia the first on 19 October 1991 at Broome Western Australia and others at Darwin Northern Territory in 1998 2005 and 2006 It is also a vagrant south in Africa as far as the Pretoria area in South Africa DiseaseBlack headed gulls were among the birds most heavily hit by the 2023 avian influenza outbreak with over 4 000 birds killed in Great Britain by early May similarly high mortality rates were also reported from France the Netherlands Italy and Germany BehaviourThe black headed gull is a bold and opportunistic feeder It eats insects fish seeds worms scraps and carrion in towns or invertebrates in ploughed fields with equal facility It is a noisy species especially in colonies with a familiar kree ar call It displays a variety of behaviour and adaptations Some of these include removing eggshells from the nest after hatching begging co ordination between siblings differences between sexes conspecific brood parasitism and extra pair paternity They are found in a variety of different habitats Breeding Eggshell removal Eggshell removal is a behaviour seen in birds once the chicks have hatched observed mostly to reduce risk of predation Removing the eggshell acts as a way of camouflage to avoid predators seeing the nest The further away egg shells are from the nest the lower the predation risk Black headed gull eggs experience predation from different species of birds foxes stoats and even other black headed gulls Although mothers show some form of aggressiveness when a predator is near in the first 30 minutes wet chicks can be easily taken by other black headed gulls after hatching when the parents of the wet chick are distracted Black headed gulls also carry away other objects that do not belong in the nest The removal of eggshells and other objects is important not only in the incubation period but also during the first few days after the eggs hatch However the removal process seems to increase as time goes on The removal is done by both the male and female parents normally lasts a few seconds and is done three times a year A black headed gull is able to differentiate an egg shell from an egg by acknowledging its thin serrated white edge the weight of the egg or eggshell does not play a role when determining its value Earlier hypotheses have attempted to explain the survival value of black headed gulls removing their eggshells from the nest including The sharp edges of the shells after hatching could harm the chicks The eggshell could somehow intrude during the brooding The eggshell could slip over the unhatched egg creating a double shell Some of the moist organic material left from the shell could lead to a production of bacteria and mouldBegging coordination between siblings Black headed gulls feed their young by regurgitating onto the ground rather than into each chick one at a time The parents tend to accommodate their regurgitation amounts for how intense the nest begging is from both an individual chick or a group of chicks begging together Chicks who are siblings have learned this behaviour and begin synchronising their begging signals to decrease the costs as an individual and increase the benefits as a whole The rate of parental food regurgitation to chicks increases with begging intensity The amount and response of begging signals differs throughout the nestling period Usually there are 3 5 begging events hour each lasting around one minute High intensity begging behaviour appears at the end of the first week in the nest but the coordination between multiple chicks emerge during the last week of the nestling period The more siblings present the more they coordinate their begging while decreasing the number of begging Sex differences Male chicks have less of a chance of survival when compared to female chicks Black headed gulls are a sexually size dimorphic species so the larger sex is at a disadvantage when the amount of food sources are low Male birds are more likely to be born in the first egg and female birds are more likely to be born in the third The position of a female black headed gull in response to the food available when laying the eggs can predict the offspring s characteristics Conspecific brood parasitism Conspecific brood parasitism is a behaviour that occurs when females lay their eggs in another female s nest of the same species It can reduce the cost of incubation and nestling young by passing it on to another bird Black headed gulls usually lay three egg clutches and the first two are normally larger than the third The third egg normally has the lowest survival rate while the first or second are usually the parasitic eggs Most of the egg dumping occurs within the beginning of the egg laying period The parasitic eggs being laid in another conspecific s nest increases the chance of hatching and may occur because of nest desertion or a nest being taken over by another bird Multiple eggs in a nest from different mothers may also result from intra specific nest parasitism joint female nesting and nest takeover Intra specific nest parasitism is a disadvantage to the hosts because the female could end up taking care of the parasitic chicks over her own and therefore neglecting them and reducing their fitness Another disadvantage for the host is that incubating more chicks than their own takes up more energy Extra pair paternity The rate of extra pair paternity EPP has a large variation between populations of black headed gulls It is primarily a context dependent strategy meaning not all black headed gulls experience this behaviour The variation between populations of extra pair paternity can be explained by the variation it has on the advantages and disadvantages it has on a female as well as the variation in pressure on a females choice The differences in the rate of EPP may be determined by multiple different factors life history traits ecological factors or different behavioural strategies of males Central periphery gradient within colonies Egg laying can be earlier in Black headed Gulls nesting in the centre of the colony with central pairs tending to lay larger eggs which have a higher hatching success than pairs nesting at the periphery of the colony Centrally nesting individuals have also been found to be in better condition and have higher genetic quality Walking displays Black headed gulls display both head bobbing walking HBW and non bobbing walking NBW Head bobbing walking is expressed by a hold phase and a thrust phase The hold phase in black headed gulls occurs mainly during the single support phase and is when the bird balances its head to equal the environment Head bobbing walking occurs during a seeking type foraging by walking through water and includes benefits such as enhancing motion and pattern detection and gathering depth information from motion parallax during the thrust phase Non bobbing walking occurs when black headed gulls are displaying a waiting behaviour while foraging on flat surfaces Synchronisation Observations on the behaviour of black headed gulls show that individuals synchronise their vigilance activity with other neighbouring black headed gulls Synchronisation in black headed gulls groups is dependent on the distance between the individuals UsesThe eggs of the black headed gull were considered a delicacy by some in the UK and eaten hard boiled The collection of black headed gull eggs is heavily regulated by the UK government Eggs may only be taken by a small number of licensed individuals at six sites between 1 April and 15 May each year and only a single egg may be taken from each nest No eggs are permitted to be sold after 30 June As the gulls tend to lay in late April and early May the eggs are only available to purchase for 3 or 4 weeks per year In popular cultureThe black headed gull is the official bird of Tokyo Japan and the Yurikamome automated guideway transit in Tokyo Bay is named after it In Richard Adams 1972 novel Watership Down a black headed gull named Kehaar who claims his name is the onomatopoeia of waves breaking against the shore plays a major part in the story Injured by a farm cat and left behind during the seasonal migration Kehaar finds himself stranded on the Downs and is taken in by a warren of rabbits He later becomes their friend and ally and helps to save the rabbits from danger many times instincts eventually force him to return to his colony but he promises to visit the rabbits each winter True to Adams stated intentions of trying to keep their behaviour close to reality Kehaar is characterised as intelligent gregarious noisy messy and impatient and with a guttural accent Kehaar appears in all three screen adaptations of the novel the character was voiced by Zero Mostel in the 1978 film Rik Mayall in the 1999 TV series and Peter Capaldi in the 2018 miniseries GalleryEggs Collection Museum Wiesbaden Germany Chroicocephalus ridibundus Rades sea Tunisia mating nesting and with chicks Ringing a black headed gull nestling Adult winter plumage in St James s Park London Adult breeding plumage Juvenile plumage In flight Juvenile at Farmoor Reservoir Oxfordshire At Farmoor Reservoir Oxfordshire First winter plumage at Blenheim Palace Oxfordshire In flight near Grossenbrode Schleswig Holstein the bird is in a near vertical position From Navi Mumbai India Ringed adult in summer Juvenile first winter source source source source source source source Black headed gulls foraging on insects Black headed gull standing on ice in Oulu FinlandReferencesButchart S Symes A 2012 Larus ridibundus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2012 e T22694420A38851158 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2012 1 RLTS T22694420A38851158 en Thomas Gavin H Wills Matthew A Szekely Tamas 24 August 2004 A supertree approach to shorebird phylogeny BMC Evolutionary Biology 4 1 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 4 28 ISSN 1471 2148 PMC 515296 PMID 15329156 Pons J M Hassanin A Crochet P A 2005 Phylogenetic relationships within the Laridae Charadriiformes Aves inferred from mitochondrial markers Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 37 3 686 699 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2005 05 011 IOC World Bird List 2008 archive Olsen Klaus Malling Larsen Hans 2003 Gulls of Europe Asia and North America London Helm pp 438 451 ISBN 978 0 7136 7087 5 Black headed Gull Bird Spot 24 August 2017 Retrieved 13 June 2021 Longevity ageing and life history of Chroicocephalus ridibundus The Animal Ageing and Longevity Database Retrieved 27 September 2015 Noddies skimmers gulls terns skuas auks IOC World Bird List IOC World Bird List Version 14 2 17 August 2024 Retrieved 4 January 2025 Hoyo Josep del Elliott Andrew Sargatal Jordi 1992 Handbook of the Birds of the World Hoatzin to auks Barcelona Lynx edicions p 615 616 ISBN 84 87334 20 2 Wernham Chris 2002 The Migration Atlas London Christopher Helm Publishers Incorporated p 356 360 ISBN 978 0 7136 6514 7 Potter E F Parnell J F Teulings R P 1980 Birds of the Carolinas The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807813997 Black headed Gull at the Broome Sewage Ponds Field guide to the birds of Australia Camberwell Vic Penguin 2010 p 295 ISBN 978 0 670 07231 6 Newman Kenneth 1998 Newman s birds of Southern Africa Halfway House Southern Book Publ p 52 ISBN 1 86812 757 5 Trust British 15 May 2023 Wave of avian influenza hitting Black headed Gulls BTO British Trust for Ornithology Retrieved 3 January 2025 Scott Paul Duncan Peter Green Jonathan A 2 January 2015 Food preference of the Black headed Gull Chroicocephalus ridibundus differs along a rural urban gradient Bird Study 62 1 56 63 Bibcode 2015BirdS 62 56S doi 10 1080 00063657 2014 984655 ISSN 0006 3657 S2CID 84645998 Tinbergen N Broekhuysen G J Feekes F Houghton J C W Kruuk H Szulc E 1962 Egg shell removal by the Black headed Gull Larus ridibundus L A Behaviour Component of Camouflage Behaviour 19 1 2 1962 71 117 doi 10 1163 156853961X00213 ISSN 0005 7959 Houghton J C W Feekes F Broekhuysen G J Tinbergen N Szulc E Kruuk H 1962 Egg Shell Removal By the Black headed Gull Larus ridibundus L a Behaviour Component of Camouflage Behaviour 19 1 2 74 116 doi 10 1163 156853961x00213 ISSN 0005 7959 Beer C G 1963 Incubation and Nest Building Behaviour of Black headed Gulls Iv Nest Building in the Laying and Incubation Periods Behaviour 21 3 4 155 176 doi 10 1163 156853963x00158 ISSN 0005 7959 Blanc Alain Ogier Nicolas Roux Angelique Denizeau Sebastien Mathevon Nicolas 2010 Begging coordination between siblings in Black headed Gulls Comptes Rendus Biologies 333 9 688 693 doi 10 1016 j crvi 2010 06 002 ISSN 1631 0691 PMID 20816649 Mathevon N Charrier I 7 May 2004 Parent offspring conflict and the coordination of siblings in gulls Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B Biological Sciences 271 suppl 4 S145 S147 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2003 0117 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 1810040 PMID 15252967 MULLER WENDT GROOTHUIS TON G G EISING CORINE M DIJKSTRA COR 2005 An experimental study on the causes of sex biased mortality in the black headed gull the possible role of testosterone PDF Journal of Animal Ecology 74 4 735 741 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2656 2005 00964 x ISSN 0021 8790 Lezalova Radka Tkadlec Emil Obornik Miroslav Simek Jaroslav Honza Marcel 7 September 2005 Should males come first The relationship between offspring hatching order and sex in the black headed gull Larus ridibundus Journal of Avian Biology 060118052425010 doi 10 1111 j 2005 0908 8857 03466 x inactive 24 November 2024 ISSN 0908 8857 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of November 2024 link Duda Norbert Chetnicki Wlodzimierz 2012 Conspecific Brood Parasitism is Biased Towards Relatives in the Common Black headed Gull Ardea 100 1 63 70 doi 10 5253 078 100 0110 ISSN 0373 2266 S2CID 86227635 YOM TOV YORAM 28 June 2008 An updated list and some comments on the occurrence of intraspecific nest parasitism in birds Ibis 143 1 133 143 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919x 2001 tb04177 x ISSN 0019 1019 Vehrencamp Sandra L 2000 Evolutionary routes to joint female nesting in birds Behavioral Ecology 11 3 334 344 doi 10 1093 beheco 11 3 334 ISSN 1465 7279 Waldeck Peter Andersson Malte 2006 Brood Parasitism and Nest Takeover in Common Eiders Ethology 112 6 616 624 Bibcode 2006Ethol 112 616W doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 2005 01187 x ISSN 0179 1613 Duda Norbert Chetnicki Wlodzimierz Waldeck Peter Andersson Malte 7 January 2008 Multiple maternity in black headed gull Larus ridibundus clutches as revealed by protein fingerprinting Journal of Avian Biology 080205233540538 0 doi 10 1111 j 2007 0908 8857 04111 x inactive 24 November 2024 ISSN 0908 8857 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of November 2024 link Indykiewicz Piotr Podlaszczuk Patrycja Minias Piotr 2017 Extra pair paternity in the black headed gull is it exceptional among colonial waterbirds Behaviour 154 11 1081 1099 doi 10 1163 1568539x 00003459 ISSN 0005 7959 Petrie Marion Kempenaers Bart 1998 Extra pair paternity in birds explaining variation between species and populations Trends in Ecology amp Evolution 13 2 52 58 Bibcode 1998TEcoE 13 52P doi 10 1016 s0169 5347 97 01232 9 ISSN 0169 5347 PMID 21238200 Indykiewicz P Podlaszczuk P Kaminski M Wlodarczyk R Minias P 2019 Central periphery gradient of individual quality within a colony of Black headed Gulls Ibis 161 4 744 758 doi 10 1111 ibi 12689 S2CID 91379509 Fujita Masaki 24 January 2006 Head bobbing and non bobbing walking of black headed gulls Larus ridibundus Journal of Comparative Physiology A 192 5 481 488 doi 10 1007 s00359 005 0083 4 ISSN 0340 7594 PMID 16432727 S2CID 23321265 Evans Madeleine H R Lihou Katie L Rands Sean A 2 July 2018 Black headed gulls synchronise their activity with their nearest neighbours PDF Scientific Reports 8 1 doi 10 1038 s41598 018 28378 x ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 6028586 PMID 29967446 Retrieved 3 January 2025 Copping Jasper 28 March 2009 Top restaurants face shortage of seagull eggs The Daily Telegraph London Conservation Natural Habitats amp c PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 April 2010 Gull s Eggs A Chef s Guide First Choice Produce 30 March 2019 Retrieved 13 January 2021 Tokyo s Symbols Tokyo Metropolitan Government Retrieved 25 May 2020 Developing Metros Developing Metros A Railway Gazette International Publication University of Michigan Transport Press 6 1996 ISSN 0268 5590 OCLC 12264501 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint others link Adams Richard Chapter 23 Kehaar Watership Down Puffin Books 1973 ISBN 0 14 030601 3 Adams Richard Chapter 38 The Thunder Breaks Watership Down Puffin Books 1973 ISBN 0 14 030601 3 Adams Richard Chapter 40 The Way Back Watership Down Puffin Books 1973 ISBN 0 14 030601 3 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Chroicocephalus ridibundus Look up black headed gull in Wiktionary the free dictionary Black headed gull stamps from many countries usurped at bird stamps org usurped Ageing and sexing PDF 2 0 MB by Javier Blasco Zumeta amp Gerd Michael Heinze Feathers of Black headed Gull Larus ridibundus at Ornithos de Archived 4 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine BirdLife species factsheet for Larus ridibundus Interactive range map of Larus ridibundus at IUCN Red List Audio recordings of Black headed gull on Xeno canto Chroicocephalus ridibundus in Field Guide Birds of the World on Flickr Article with video about Black headed Gull at avibirds com