THE BIRDS
CALIFORNIA GULL. Larus californicus Lawrence
Field characters.A gull
of medium size; total length 20 inches or more. Plumage of adults (pl.
41a) white on whole head, neck, lower surface and tail; back
neutral gray; wings black-ended, with white spots near tips; bill
yellow, with dark band near tip and an orange spot near end of lower
mandible. Plumage of immatures mixed dark and light brown. Wings long
and pointed, tail short and square-ended; flies gracefully, frequently
sailing or circling on set wings; when on water sits high, with tips of
wings crossed behind back.
Occurrence.Common in
summer on Mono Lake, nesting on Paoha Island; occasionally straggles
over Sierran crest to lakes on west slope; noted at Tuolumne Meadows
(8600 feet), July 5, 1915, at Young Lake, altitude 10,000 feet, July 8,
1915, and at Tenaya Lake, altitude 8141 feet, July 29 and September 26,
1915.
Most people associate gulls with the seashore. This
disposition in general is correct in so far as the winter season is
concerned, but during the summer months several of the species leave
their maritime haunts altogether and seek bodies of water far inland.
Such is the case with the California Gull.
In 1915 we saw California Gulls only four times, as
detailed above; but in the late spring and early summer of 1916, when
Mr. Dixon visited Mono Lake, he found them there in numbers. On May 6
three birds were seen at the mouth of Leevining Creek; by the latter
part of the same month the species had become common there.
On May 27, 1916, Mr. Dixon visited the nesting colony
of California Gulls on Paoha Island, the larger of the two islands in
Mono Lake. (See pl. 41.) From the north side of Paoha two ridges of
black obsidian-like rock extend northward about 200 yards out into the
lake. These ridges are about 20 feet high and enclose a long narrow bay
about 10 or 15 yards wide and 100 yards in length. Gulls nest on both of
these peninsulas but chiefly on the eastern one which bears a rather
dense growth of a shrubby plant. Here, over an area of 1-1/2 to 2 acres,
there was an average of at least one nest for every 100 square feet; in
some places it was estimated that there was one to each 10 square feet.
The total number of breeding birds was believed to be close to 1000
pairs.
The nests were placed on the rocky shingle of the
beach, in depressions under bushes and on the tops of rocks. Nesting
material was scanty, consisting chiefly of old wing feathers, molted in
previous years. Many mummified bodies of half-grown young of last year's
brood were lying about, and in one instance one of these mummies formed
the principal part of the nest. Nests containing 2 eggs were more common
than those with one or with 3 eggs, the latter occurring in about equal
numbers. One nest held 4 eggs, but this large number was clearly the
result of two birds laying in the same nest; for 2 of the eggs were
relatively short with a light greenish ground color, while the other 2
were longer, more pointed, and of a brownish ground color. Laying had
evidently commenced about May 15, for many of the eggs contained
half-developed embryos, but none had yet hatched. The parent gulls
seemed to appreciate the need for sheltering their eggs from the intense
heat of the sun, which beat down on the bare black rocks. They were
often seen standing so as to cast a shadow over their eggs, while they
themselves held their mouths open and panted from the heat. Males were
seen whose actions seemed to show them to be urging their mates to
return to the nests; in some instances they accompanied the females when
the latter returned to their duties.
On July 3 a second visit was made to the Paoha Island
colony. By this time practically all of the eggs had hatched; about
one-third of the young were running about, well feathered and almost
half grown. Four nests were found with chicks not more than a day old,
and one contained a downy gull so recently hatched from the egg that it
was not yet dry. Despite its recent emergence from the shell, this chick
was able to scramble about until it found shelter in the shade of a
rock. Apparently the adult birds had been more successful with their
broods this year, for there were few dead bodies of young gulls about
and no infertile eggs. It is possible, however, that abandoned or
infertile eggs are promptly eaten by neighboring members of the
colony.
In one part of the colony there are many hop-sage
bushes about 3 feet high and 3 or 4 feet in diameter. These grow close
to the ground, and the strong wind which continually sweeps the island
blows the molted white body feathers of the parent gulls against these
bushes until each bush has at its base a feathery white windrow often
six inches thick. When alarmed, the gray downy young gulls rush headlong
into these windrows and do not stop until they are entirely hidden. The
larger young, in dusky juvenal plumage, are not so fortunate. They
cannot hide their whole bodies in the windrows, and their stubby black
tails remain projecting out beyond the drifted feathers in a very
grotesque manner. Six youngsters were pulled out of one windrow and
there were still other, smaller chicks hidden in the mass. Holes in the
rocks were also favorite shelters and places of concealment for the
small young; often a chick would shade its head in a small cavity while
its body remained out in the broiling heat of the sun.
When disturbed, the larger young headed for the
beach, jumping and tumbling over the rocks faster than a man could walk.
When they reached the ten-foot bank which borders the waters of the lake
they did not hesitate, but plunged over the edge. Once in the water they
seemed perfectly at home and swam about, 100 yards offshore, where they
were herded into 'rafts' by the parents and prevented from going farther
out. (See pl. 41c). As soon as the intruder retired, the young
turned back toward the beach. Once, when a party of a dozen juvenile
gulls started down the slope toward the water, they loosened a veritable
avalanche of small rocks. Gulls and rocks were pretty well mixed by the
time the water was reached and it seemed as though some of the birds
would certainly be killed; but they all swam away apparently
unharmed.
The young gulls when first hatched eat bits of
eggshell, but soon their diet consists exclusively of brine shrimps.
Birds 3 or 4 days old had, we found, a considerable number of these
crustaceans in their stomachs. When handled, the first thing a young
gull does is to throw up quantities of brine shrimps; and the adults,
flying overhead, show their displeasure at the disturbance of the young
by pouring down similar disgorgements. When undisturbed the adults stand
on guard at the nest site. The young play around in the vicinity, but
seem always to return to the nest site for feeding. The larger young
frequently climb up on the tops of the rocks to await the return of the
parents.
The old birds often visit fresh-water lakes in the
vicinity to feed on the huge frog tadpoles which there abound. An adult
bird captured near Williams Butte on June 23, 1916, disgorged several of
these large tadpoles.
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