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  2. Glaucous-winged gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glaucous-winged_gull

    The glaucous-winged gull (Larus glaucescens) is a large, white-headed gull. The genus name is from Latin Larus which appears to have referred to a gull or other large seabird. The specific glaucescens is Neo-Latin for " glaucous " from the Ancient Greek , glaukos , denoting the grey color of its wings.

  3. Western gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_gull

    The western gull (Larus occidentalis) is a large white-headed gull that lives on the west coast of North America and the Pacific Ocean. The western gull ranges from British Columbia, Canada, to Baja California, Mexico. [2] It was previously considered conspecific with the yellow-footed gull (Larus livens) of the Gulf of California.

  4. Gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gull

    The Pacific gull is a large white-headed gull with a distinctively heavy bill. Gulls range in size from the little gull, at 120 grams (4 + 1 ⁄ 4 ounces) and 29 centimetres (11 + 1 ⁄ 2 inches), to the great black-backed gull, at 1.75 kg (3 lb 14 oz) and 76 cm (30 in). They are generally uniform in shape, with heavy bodies, long wing, and ...

  5. Larus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larus

    They are in general medium-large birds, typically pale grey to black above and white below and on the head, often with black markings with white spots ("mirrors") on their wingtips and in a few species also some black on the tail. They have stout, longish bills and webbed feet; in winter, the head is often streaked or smudged dark grey. The ...

  6. Slaty-backed gull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slaty-backed_gull

    The slaty-backed gull (Larus schistisagus) is a large, white-headed gull that breeds on the north-eastern coast of the Palearctic, but travels widely during nonbreeding seasons. It is similar in appearance to the western gull and the glaucous-winged gull .

  7. 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 ...

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

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

    The book adopts a conservative approach at higher taxonomic levels, lumping all gulls (except for ivory gull, Ross's gull and the two kittiwakes) in the genus Larus. A revised taxonomy is adopted at the species level, however; a number of distinctive forms (mainly in the large white-headed gull complex) are regarded as separate species.

  9. 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.