IVORY GULL.
L a ru s eb u rn eu s, L in n .
L a Mouette b lan ch e , o u Sénateur.
F rom the circumstance of two or three examples of this beautiful Gull having been captured at different times
within the precincts of the British Islands, all modern writers have included it in the Fauna of this country. The
snowy whiteness of its plumage renders it one of the most delicate and interesting species of its genus. Dwelling
almost solely within the regions of the arctic circle, the few stragglers which now and then pass the
boundary line, and visit the more temperate portions o f the European continent, are, if taken by the ornithologist
during these peregrinations, considered a prize of no little rarity and value. The first authenticated instance
of its being captured in the British Islands was communicated to the Wernerian Society by L. Edmonston, Esq.,
and a notice of the occurrence published in the fourth volume of the Memoirs of that Society. This individual,
which was killed in Balta Sound, Shetland, in December 1822, and one*>since, in an immature state, in the
Frith of Clyde, are the only recorded instances of its having been found near our coasts. In a note in the
Manuel of M. Temminck, we find this author also expatiating on its. extreme rarity in our latitudes, two
individuals only having at that period come under his notice.
From the accounts given of this Gull in the works of Dr. Richardson, Capt. Sabine, and most arctic
voyagers, we learn that in those regions it is a species of no rarity ; and from its being equally common in
Greenland and Spitzbergen, we may naturally conclude that it ranges over the whole of the arctic circle. In
these solitary wilds it is constantly accompanied by the Fulmar Petrel ; and like the generality of its tribe, which
are constantly observed in the neighbourhood of shipping, it is always to be seen following the whalers and
feeding upon the refuse thrown overboard, which, with blubber, small fish, and Crustacea, forms the principal
portion of its diet.
It is said to breed in rocks overhanging the sea, but the number and colour of its eggs we have yet to
discover.
The sexes, when fully adult, are alike in colouring ; the young, on the contrary, (as is the case with most
species of the genus,) are so very dissimilar that they have been mistaken, and described as a distinct species.
The plumage of the first autumn is an almost uniform blackish grey, which gradually gives place to a mottled
livery of black and white, the ends of the primaries and tail retaining the dark marking the longest, and until
the end of the second year. It is said that the immaculate white plumage is that of summer, and that the
head and neck are streaked with grey in winter.
The base of the bill is deep lead colour, the remainder being fine ochre yellow ; the irides are brown ; the
feet black ; and, as the name implies, the whole of the plumage is pure white.
The Plate represents an adult male rather more than three fourths of the natural size.