Common Gull.
Larus cams, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 54.
— hybemus, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 596.
cyanorhynchus, Meyer, Taschenb., p. 480.
procellosus, pt., Bechst. Naturg. Deutschl., tom. iv. p. 647.
Laroides procellosus, canus, et canescens, Brehm, Vög. Deutschl., pp. 750, 751, 753.
Gavia cinerea, Briss. Orn., tom. vi. p. 175, tab. xvi. fig. i, . .
hyberna, Briss. Orn., tom. vi. p. 189.
I f any one o f the sea-birds which enliven our shores with their presence be deserving of the term Common
it is undoubtedly the one here depicted, and o f which during the last few years, as we learn from the
daily papers, many thousands have been destroyed, in mere wantonness, or for the sake of their skins for
what have been considered decorative purposes. It is sickening to think of the amount o f destruction
which has been dealt out to these fairy-like creatures for such trivial ends. To kill them off to
the last bird when they visit Flamborough and other headlands o f our coasts for the purpose of
breeding, as has been repeatedly done, is in my opinion most disgraceful. So wholesale has been the
destruction o f this species and o f the beautiful Grebe, that the latter has been almost extirpated,—a result
which must meet with the most decided disapprobation of every rightly constituted mind ; and I do hope
that the ladies, for whom most o f these acts o f Vandalism are committed, will at once abandon a fashion which
must call forth the maledictions o f every true lover of nature—no inconsiderable portion o f the community.
Having said this much with the view o f protecting an indigenous species whose buoyant flight and elegant
evolutions in the air must have been witnessed and admired by thousands, I now proceed to give an account
of its habits and economy. In the British Islands it is so generally dispersed that to particularize localities
wherein it may be found is unnecessary. Every writer, whether it be Mr. Rodd, of Cornwall, Macgillivray, of
Scotland, or Thompson, o f Ireland, testifies to its general distribution over the country to which their observations
refer. In winter it may be seen either singly or in small companies on most o f our low flat shores,
sometimes by the sea, at others in the estuaries, not unfrequently far up our tidal rivers, and occasionally
still further in the interior o f the country. It often settles and feeds on pastures near the sea, and may be
seen following the plough for the sake o f the worms and grubs exposed on the newly turned soil. In such
situations the snowy whiteness of the plumage contrasts strongly with the surrounding objects; and the birds
look truly beautiful when a flock rise suddenly in the air, and when opposed to a black cloud resemble sprites
floating in buoyant curves and performing many varied and graceful evolutions.
Each species of Gull usually resorts to some particular group of rocks or islands for the purpose o f breeding
; and the present one offers no exception to the rule. Among the sites chosen by it in England are
Flamborough Head on the coast o f Northumberland, and St. Abb’s Head in Berwickshire, where, according
to Selby, it occupies the whole face of the cliff. In Scotland the craggy cliffs of many parts of the mainland,
and similar situations in the Orkney and Shetland Islands, are equally resorted to. It is also said to breed on
Lochs Shin and Laighal and a few smaller ones, sometimes making its nest on their turfy shores. In Ireland,
Thompson, states, on the authority o f Dr. J. D . Marshall, that in June 1834 it occupied one of the large natural
amphitheatres formed on the north-western side of Rathlin Island, that Mr. J. V. Stewart knew it to breed
on. the lofty cliffs o f the peninsula o f the Horn to the westward o f Horn Head, and Mr. Neligan informed
him that it bred in numbers on a low grassy islet off the Kerry coast. The nest, which is o f large size, is
generally composed of masses o f seaweed, grasses, and other vegetable substances. The eggs are usually
three in number, of a dark olive-brown, spotted with darker brown and black, two inches and a quarter in
length by one inch and a half in breadth..
“ This species,” says Macgillivray, “ has a light and buoyant flight, during which it often inclines to
either side. It walks and runs prettily, with short steps, pats the sands at the edge o f the water with its feet,
emits a shrill and somewhat harsh cry, and is apt to give the alarm to other birds at the approach o f the
sportsman. It is not, however, nearly so timid or so sensible of danger as the larger Gulls, and frequently allows
a person to come within shot. Often also, when one has been killed or wounded, its companions, after
flying off, collect again, hover around, or even alight, when some o f them may frequently be obtained.
When feeding along with Rooks in pasture-grounds they are generally less wary than those birds, especially
in places where they are not much liable to be molested. They never, I think, molest any other bird,
por are they addicted to quarrelling among themselves. Their food consists of small fishes, such as