Iceland Gull.
Lams leucopterus, Faber, Prodr. isl. Orn., p. 91.
— argentatus, Sabine, Trans. Linn. Soc., vol. xii. p. 546.
— glaucdides, Temm.
— islandicus, Edmondst, Trans. Wern. Soc., vol. iv. p. 500.
arcticus, Macg. Trans. Wern. Soc., vol. v. p. 268.
minor, Brehm, Yog. Deutschl., p. 736.
A c c o rd in g to the law o f priority, now so generally followed by naturalists, I ought not to have adopted
Edmonston’s name o f islandicus for this species, inasmuch as that of leucopterus had long previously been
assigned to it by Faber; but this latter term being equally descriptive of the white-winged Larus glaucus, it
appeared to me so inappropriate that I did not feel justified in employing it. The Glaucous and the Iceland
Gull are in all particulars so much alike, except in size, that one description would serve for both. What
the Lesser Black-backed Gull is to the Greater, such is the present bird to the Glaucous. This circumstance
has not failed to call forth remarks from some of the authors who have written on the genus Larus, questioning
the propriety o f separating them ; still, I imagine, there is scarcely a living ornithologist who would think
o f regarding the Greater and Lesser Black-backed Gulis as the same, or the Glaucous and the Iceland
species as identical. In a state o f nature they have never been kuown to mix or breed with each other,
although they frequent similar latitudes and countries. The white-winged Gulls are the Arctic representatives
o f the more southerly Black-backed Gulls. In winter, when the severity o f the weather in Baffin’s Bay
and other polar regions is at its height, the white-winged birds beat a retreat to the shores of the
British Islands; and hence at that season all four of the birds above-mentioned may be found in our seas,
and in some instances intermingle for a short time.
As regards the habits and economy o f the Iceland Gull, what has been written respecting those o f the
preceding species (Larus glaucus') is equally descriptive o f those o f the present bird, save and except that
the larger and stronger bird will prey upon living animals of a larger size than his weakly congener. From
what we have been able to gather on their nidification and the number and colouring o f their eggs, a
great similarity ex ists; and in the changes o f plumage between youth and maturity they are as nearly
identical as possible.
“ The present species,” says Selby, “ in all its stages o f plumage from adolescence to maturity, bears
the closest resemblance to the Glaucous Gull, and can only be distinguished by its striking inferiority of
size and by the greater length o f its wings, which reach, when closed, upwards o f an inch beyond the end
o f the tail, whereas in the other they scarcely reach that part. Like its prototype it is a winter visitant to
the Shetland Isles and the northern part o f Scotland ; and a few stray as far as the Northumberland coast,
where I have obtained three or four specimens, but all in the immature plumage. Its habits are stated by
Edmonston to be more lively and active than those o f the Glaucous Gull; and it displays more elegance
o f form. It is common on the Iceland coast, to which, it is probable, many o f those who winter with us
and in similar latitudes retire to breed. It feeds upon fish, the flesh o f whales, and other carrion.”
The only remark I need make on the above passage is that, upon the authority of Professor Newton, the
Iceland Gull does not appear to breed in Iceland, but is a winter visitant, only arriving, according to Faber,
towards the end o f September, and mostly leaving by the end o f April; and I may add that it migrates much
further south than the shores o f Northumberland. Mr. Rodd speaks of a very fine nearly adult example
which was obtained on the Scilly Islands ; and there are many other recorded instances o f its having been
procured in various parts of England.
Mr. R. Gray thus writes respecting this bird in his ‘ Birds o f the West o f Scotland : ’— “ Although the
Iceland Gull is by no means a common bird on our Scottish coasts, it has been frequently met with both
on the eastern and western shores. From Shetland to Berwickshire immature birds are seen or killed
almost every winter; and the same may be said o f its appearance from the coast o f Skye to the south o f
Ayrshire. The late Mr. Thompson mentions, in his ‘ Birds o f Ireland,’ that he had procured two specimens
from Ballantrae, on the borders o f Wigtownshire, where they are seen every winter, and that his friend, Mr.
Sinclair, had also seen six or eight o f these birds in the Island o f Arran. The species, indeed, appears to
be a regular visitor to the Clyde and the shores of Ayrshire, as I have observed it for years in succession