AVIS-IBIS

Birds of Indian Subcontinent

BREEDING SUCCESS AND POPULATION GROWTH IN A COLONY OF HERRING AND LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULLS LARUS ARGENTATUS AND L. FUSCUS

Publication Type:Journal Article
Year of Publication:1967
Authors:Brown, RGB
Journal:Ibis
Volume:109
Issue:4
Date Published:1967
ISBN Number:1474-919X
Keywords:Corvidae, Corvus, Corvus corone, Laridae, Larus, Larus argentatus, Larus cachinnans, Larus fuscus, Larus vegae
Abstract:Summary This paper describes the results of investigations into the factors affecting breeding success of the Herring and Lesser Black-backed Gulls Larus argentatus and L. fuscus, in the large colony on Walney Island, northwest Lancashire, between 1962 and 1965. These investigations were concerned with the incubation period, and the first ten days after hatching. The survival of chicks to ten days is 67% in Herring Gulls, and 56% in Lesser Black-backs. Most of these losses occur in the period just after hatching and are due to “cannibalism” by other gulls. This form of predation does not appear to be masking any effects from starvation or disease. The following factors contribute to egg or chick mortality:breeding too late (and, to a much smaller extent, too early); breeding in the open, as opposed to amongst cover; the facts that eggs in small clutches have a lower hatching success than those in large ones and that Herring Gull (but not Lesser Black-back) chicks in small broods are less likely to survive to ten days than are those in large broods. Chick mortality after the first ten days is not certainly known. About 30% of the eggs laid gave rise to fledged young— or about one fledged chick per pair. In the Herring Gull, the average clutch size (2.56) is lower than that of the Lesser Black-back (2.76). Both species show a seasonal decline in clutch size—this occurs earlier in the Herring Gulls than in the Lesser Black-backs. The Walney population, which stood at about 700 pairs in 1950, had reached 12,000 in 1957, and is at present about 18–19,000 pairs. It is suggested that this increase may be linked to the greater availability, or exploitation, of human garbage in the Morecambe Bay area. The population explosion between 1950 and 1957 must have been partly due to massive immigration and could not have come about through natural increase alone. The possible influences of the gulls' behaviour on the population growth are discussed. There is no evidence of any “shock disease”, although the Walney colony is very crowded. “Cannibalism” is regarded, not as evidence of a failing food supply, but as an extension of the normal hunting behaviour of these omnivorous gulls; it will be an economical means of obtaining food only in a large, dense colony, such as Walney. It may be offset by increased breeding efficiency due to social factors.
URL:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919X.1967.tb00019.x
Short Title:Ibis
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