By Marianne Taylor

Published: Monday, 26 December 2022 at 12:00 am


We are, it’s often said, a nation of animal lovers. The beauty of our native wild birds, in particular, is celebrated in word and art, in print and on screen. However, there are some prominent species that don’t attract universal adoration, and it is the gulls that top of that list.

Is there any more divisive wild bird in the UK than the herring gull? This is the default ‘seagull’ of our coastal towns, the silver-backed and yellow-billed, bright-eyed and raucous-voiced scourge of many a beach picnic, and despoiler of many a parked car.

Yet we admire its grace on the wing, and we can’t help but admire its intelligence, which becomes more apparent year on year as we learn more about its ways (see below). We coo over its cute, fluffy offspring, and we might even find its squawks delightfully evocative (from a distance). The British seaside would certainly not be the same without it.

Read on to learn more about the different gull species in the UK by birdwatcher and author Marianne Taylor:


How to watch gulls

Gull-watching won’t always take you to the most enchanting wild places – there is great gull-watching to be had at rubbish dumps, for example, and smelly fishing ports. But the exciting possibility of finding something unusual within the swirling, screaming flocks is magical enough.

Even seaside towns turn up their share of unusual species, as well as providing great close-up opportunities to watch the commoner species interacting, and to look out for individuals wearing numbered DARVIC leg-rings, as part of various research projects studying gulls’ seasonal movements and lifespans.

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