It may have seemed like there were there fewer gulls around this year, but if you thought there was a drop-off in seagulls in 2012 you just might not have recognized them.
Some three dozen species of gulls have been reported in North Carolina, and quite a few spend time regularly along the Lower Cape Fear coast. Several hundred nesting pairs of the laughing gull spend the late spring and early summer raising young on islands near the mouth of the Cape Fear River. Named for their “ha-ha-ha” call, the laughing gulls are usually the ones you see tailing ferries in hopes of a handout from tourists.
Gulls are pretty opportunistic birds, they tend to go where the food sources are – they might be at the beach for a while, then fly off to a landfill or a fast-food parking lot.
Also common around local areas are the ring-billed gulls, larger than the laughing gulls, with white heads and the distinctive dark ring on their bills, which spend the year around here but gather particularly in winter. Herring gulls, white-headed, yellow-beaked birds, which winter here, but sometimes hang around through summer; Bonaparte’s gulls, which winter here; and the great black-backed gulls, the largest Tar Heel gull species, with a wingspan of nearly 6 feet. Not surprisingly, their backs are black-colored.
Identifying gulls can be tricky, because their plumage changes at different times of the year. Laughing gulls, for example, have black heads during breeding season, but immature gulls and non-breeding adults might have greyish heads instead. Bonaparte’s gulls are black-headed while breeding, but when we see them during the winter, their heads are usually white.
Laughing gulls, herring gulls and black-backed gulls nest in North Carolina, usually on estuarine islands or spoil islands. The rest migrate up or down the coast seasonally. At the moment, all their populations of local gulls appear stable and non-threatened.