The foraging behavior of birds is often influenced by the development and dietary needs of their young. Laughing Gulls in New Jersey, USA, nest in highly productive salt marshes but adults commonly forage at inland sites when they have young in the nest. I monitored movements of individual Laughing Gulls using color-marking, banding and radio-telemetry combined with land-based and aerial surveys. I found that breeding adults were highly mobile and commonly flew inland to forage. Color-marked individuals were observed a mean of 16.6 km and a median of 11.0 km from the colony. Radio-tagged birds were located as far as 40 km inland. Laughing Gulls showed foraging site tenacity both within a given year and from year to year. Radio-tagged adults made as many as 11 foraging trips from the colony per day during both diurnal and nocturnal periods. Activity at the colony peaked during late evening and morning hours. Furthermore, Laughing Gull movement patterns changed with progression of the nesting season. Gulls spent more time at the colony while incubating than during either the chick rearing or fledging periods.
How to translate text using browser tools
1 July 2003
Movement Patterns of Adult Laughing Gulls Larus atricilla During the Nesting Season
Jerald J. Dosch
C. Annett
1987. Proximate mechanisms affecting dietary switches in breeding gulls. Studies in Avian Biology 10: 102. Google Scholar
C. Annett
,
R. Pierotti
1989. Chick hatching as a trigger for dietary switching in the Western Gull. Colonial Waterbirds 12: 4–11. Google Scholar
J. L. Belant
,
S. K. Ickes
,
T. W. Seamans
1998. Importance of landfills to urban-nesting Herring and Ring-billed Gulls. Landscape Urb. Plan. 43: 11–19. Google Scholar
J. L. Belant
,
T. W. Seamans
1993. Evaluation of dyes and techniques to color-mark incubating Herring Gulls. J. Field Ornithol. 64: 440–451. Google Scholar
J. L. Belant
,
T. W. Seamans
,
S. W. Gabrey
,
S. K. Ickes
1993. Importance of landfills to nesting Herring Gulls. Condor 95: 817–830. Google Scholar
M. Bertellotti
,
P. Yorio
,
G. Blanco
,
M. Giaccardi
2001. Use of tips by nesting Kelp Gulls at a growing colony in Patagonia. J. Field Ornithol. 72: 338–348. Google Scholar
K. L. Bildstein
1993. White Ibis: Wetland wanderer. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington & London. Google Scholar
K. L. Bildstein
,
R. Christy
,
P. DeCoursey
1982. Size and structure of a South Carolina salt marsh avian community. Wetlands 2: 118–137. Google Scholar
K. L. Bildstein
,
W. Post
,
J. Johnston
,
P. Frederick
1990. Freshwater wetlands, rainfall, and the breeding ecology of White Ibises (Eudocimus albus) in coastal South Carolina. Wilson Bull. 102: 84–98. Google Scholar
L. Bøkenes
,
J. B. Mercer
1995. Salt gland function in the common Eider Duck (Somateria mollissima). J. Comparative Physiol. B 165: 255–267. Google Scholar
D. J. Borror
,
R. E. White
1970. A field guide to insects. Houghton Mifflin Co., New York. Google Scholar
F. G. Buckley
,
P. A. Buckley
1972. The breeding ecology of Royal Terns Sterna (Thalasseus) maxima maxima. Ibis 114: 344–359. Google Scholar
M. Bukacińska
,
D. Bukaciński
,
A. L. Spaans
1996. Attendance and diet in relation to breeding success in Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus). Auk 113: 300–309. Google Scholar
J. Burger
1976. Daily and seasonal activity patterns in breeding Laughing Gulls. Auk 93: 308–323. Google Scholar
J. Burger
1985. Habitat selection in temperate marsh-nesting birds. In:
M. L. Cody
(ed.).
Habitat selection in birds. Academic Press, San Diego, pp. 253–281. Google Scholar
J. Burger
1986. Selection for equitability in some aspects of reproductive investment in Herring Gulls Larus argentatus.Ornis Scand. 18: 17–23. Google Scholar
J. Burger
,
K. J. Staine
1993. Nocturnal behavior of gulls in coastal New Jersey. Estuaries 16: 809–814. Google Scholar
R. W. Butler
1995. The patient predator: Foraging and population ecology of the Great Blue Heron Ardea herodias in British Columbia. Canadian Wildlife Service, Occasional paper no. 86. Google Scholar
D. F. Caccamise
,
L. M. Reed
,
L. S. Delay
,
K. A. Bennett
,
J. J. Dosch
1995. Studies of bird airport associations directed at mitigation of bird strike hazards. Draft Final Report for project DFTA01-91-Z-02004. Prepared for Department of Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration, Atlantic City International Airport/FAA Technical Center. Google Scholar
M. L. Cody
1985. An introduction to habitat selection in birds. In
M. L. Cody
(ed.).
Habitat selection in birds. Academic Press, San Diego, pp. 1–56. Google Scholar
J. W. F. Davis
1975. Specialization in feeding location by Herring Gulls. J. Animal Ecol. 44: 795–804. Google Scholar
R. A. Dolbeer
,
J. L. Belant
,
J. Sillings
1993. Shooting gulls reduces strikes with aircraft at John F. Kennedy International Airport. Wildlife Soc. Bull. 21: 442–50. Google Scholar
R. A. Dolbeer
,
J. L. Bucknall
1994. Shooting gulls reduces strikes with aircraft at John F. Kennedy International Airport, 1991–1993. Proc. Bird Strike Comm. Europe 22: 375–396. Google Scholar
J. J. Dosch
1996. Influence of nestling diet and salt tolerance on adult movement and foraging patterns: Field studies of the Laughing Gull (Larus atricilla). PhD thesis, Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, New Jersey. Google Scholar
J. J. Dosch
1997a. Diet of nestling Laughing Gulls in southern New Jersey. Colonial Waterbirds 20: 273–281. Google Scholar
J. J. Dosch
1997b. Salt tolerance of nestling Laughing Gulls: An experimental field investigation. Colonial Waterbirds 20: 449–457. Google Scholar
T. Fagerström
,
J. Moreno
,
A. Carlson
1983. Load size and energy delivery in birds feeding nestlings: Constraints on and alternative strategies to energy-maximization. Oecologia 56: 93–98. Google Scholar
R. P. ffrench
,
F. Haverschmidt
1970. The Scarlet Ibis in Surinam and Trinidad. Living Bird 9: 147–165. Google Scholar
J. P. Gibbs
1991. Spatial relationships between nesting colonies and foraging areas of Great Blue Herons. Auk 108: 764–770. Google Scholar
J. P. Gibbs
,
S. Woodward
,
M. L. Hunter
,
A. E. Hutchinson
1987. Determinants of Great Blue Heron colony distribution in coastal Maine. Auk 104: 38–47. Google Scholar
M. Gorke
,
R. Brandi
1986. How to live in colonies: Spatial foraging strategies of the Black-headed Gull. Oecologia 70: 288–290. Google Scholar
W. L. Jarvis
,
W. E. Southern
1976. Food habits of Ring-billed Gulls breeding in the Great Lakes region. Wilson Bull. 88: 621–631. Google Scholar
C. D. Jenkins Jr
.,
L. J. Niles
,
J. Wessel
1989. Survey of colonial nesting waterbird species on the Atlantic Coast of New Jersey. Unpublished report, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. Google Scholar
J. W. Johnston
,
K. L. Bildstein
1990. Dietary salt as a physiological constraint in White Ibis breeding in an estuary. Physiol. Zool. 63: 190–207. Google Scholar
R. Kane
,
R. B. Farrer
1976. 1976 Coastal colonial bird survey of New Jersey. Occasional Papers, No. 125, New Jersey Audubon 2: 8–14. Google Scholar
D. Lack
1968. Ecological adaptations for breeding birds. Chapman and Hall, London. Google Scholar
R. H. MacArthur
1972. Geographical ecology: Patterns in distribution of species. Harper and Row, New York. Google Scholar
L. Marion
1989. Territorial feeding and colonial breeding are not mutually exclusive: The case of the Grey Heron (Ardea cinerea). J. Anim. Ecol. 58: 693–710. Google Scholar
R. McNeil
,
P. Drapeau
,
R. Pierotti
1993. Nocturnality in colonial waterbirds: occurrence, special adaptations, and suspected benefits. Current Ornithol. 10: 187–246. Google Scholar
R. Morris
1987. Time-partitioning of clutch and brood care activities in Herring Gulls: A measure of parental quality? Stud. Avian Biol. 10: 68–74. Google Scholar
R. D. Morris
,
J. E. Black
1980. Radiotelemetry and Herring Gull foraging patterns. J. Field Ornithol. 51: 110–118. Google Scholar
E. C. Murphy
,
R. H. Day
,
K. L. Oakley
,
A. A. Hoover
1984. Dietary changes and poor reproductive performance in Glaucous-winged Gulls. Auk 101: 532–541. Google Scholar
K. G. K. Nyström
,
O. Pehrsson
1988. Salinity as a constraint affecting food and habitat choice of mussel-feeding diving ducks. Ibis 130: 94–100. Google Scholar
R. Pierotti
,
C. Annett
1987. Reproductive consequences of dietary specialization and switching in an ecological generalist. In:
A. C. Kamil
,
J. Krebs
,
H. R. Pulliam
(eds).
Foraging Behavior. Plenum Publishing Corporation, New York, pp. 417–22. Google Scholar
R. Pierotti
,
C. A. Annett
1990. Diet and reproductive output in seabirds. Bioscience 40: 568–574. Google Scholar
SAS Institute Inc. 1985. SAS/STAT ™ guide for personal computers, version 6 edition. SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC. Google Scholar
K. Schmidt-Nielsen
1960. The salt-secreting gland of marine birds. Circulation 21: 955–967. Google Scholar
D. A. Shealer
2002. Foraging behavior and food of seabirds. In:
E. A. Schreiber
, J. Burger
(eds).
Biology of marine birds. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, pp. 137–177. Google Scholar
R. P. Sokal
,
F. J. Rohlf
1981. Biometry: The principles and practice of statistics in biological research, 2nd ed.
W. H. Freeman
,
San Francisco. Google Scholar
W. E. Southern
1987. Gull research in the 1980s: Symposium overview. Stud. Avian Biol. 10: 1–7. Google Scholar
D. W. Stokes
1983. A guide to observing insect lives. Little, Brown and Company, Boston. Google Scholar
Fish U.S.
and
Service. Wildlife
1993. White-tailed deer population assessment at the Federal Aviation Administration Technical Center, Pomona, Atlantic County, New Jersey. Technical Assistance Report. Pleasantville, New Jersey. Google Scholar
L. A. Wagner
1992. Equitability of parental investment in laughing gulls. M.Sc. thesis. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey. Google Scholar
Y. Watanuki
1992. Individual diet difference, parental care and reproductive success in Slaty-backed Gulls. Condor 94: 159–171. Google Scholar
A. V. Zale
,
R. Mulholland
1985. Habitat suitability index models: Laughing Gull. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Report 82 (10.94). Google Scholar
Acta Ornithologica
Vol. 38 • No. 1
July 2003
Vol. 38 • No. 1
July 2003
foraging
Larus atricilla
Laughing Gull
movement
radio-telemetry