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Iceland Gull Larus glaucoides

   

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Iceland Gull, winter
© Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

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Family: Laridae, Gulls and Terns view all from this family

Description 23" (58 cm). A smaller version of the Glaucous Gull, with relatively smaller bill and rounded head. Adults are pearl-gray above, white on head and below, Canadian breeders usually with darker gray markings at wing tips; feet are pinkish. Immatures are creamy buff; bill dark in first winter.

Habitat Lake and river shores, ocean beaches, sewer outlets, and refuse dumps.

Nesting 2 or 3 light brown eggs, with darker blotches, in a nest lined with grass, moss, and seaweed placed either on a cliff or a sandy shore.

Range Breeds on eastern Baffin Island and coastal Greenland. Winters in eastern North America south to New Jersey and Great Lakes. Also in Eurasia.

Voice Like Herring Gull, a variety of croaks, squeaks, and screams.

Discussion The habits of the two "white-winged" gulls that occur regularly in the East are similar, but the smaller Iceland Gull is more buoyant and graceful on the wing. It is also more of a scavenger and much less predatory. In addition to garbage dumps and sewage outlets, this species frequents places where fish are being cleaned. Both this species and the Glaucous Gull, being relatively scarce, are eagerly sought by birders.

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