Odd 2cy gull in London
Posted: Mon Jun 17, 2013 7:28 pm
Hi all
I'm looking for some expert input on a large gull I found at my study site of Rainham landfill, Greater London, last Friday (14th June). A one-year-old bird, in essence it seemed to have strong visual elements of both Caspian and Lesser Black-backed Gull - e.g. rather long, slender bill and very white head, neck and underparts with prominent hindneck streaking, but rather dark greyish 'upper' saddle with distinctive dark shaft streaks to the feathers. In terms of moult, it has progressed to dropping p4, but interestingly the newly growing P1 and P2 appear dark grey and very adult-like - surely odd for a typical one-year-old Lesser Black-backed (ssp fuscus excluded), and both odd and too dark for Caspian of the same age. My initial question then is can graellsii or intermedius LBBG exceptionally acquire adult-like feathers at this age? I know that both fuscus and heuglini can be a year 'advanced' in plumage terms. For a number of reasons the former doesn't seem a good fit; the latter might be better, and there are some quite similar individuals on Gull-research.org and in Olsen and Larsson (2003), but perhaps there is perhaps a more logical explanation than such a way-out-of-range candidate. Coupled with the Caspian-type elements, it strikes me as a potentially interesting bird. Structurally and in terms of darkness of mantle shade I think Yellow-legged is unlikely - so is a hybrid the best option, or something more exotic?
Hope you can help with this one,
With thanks
Dominic Mitchell
I'm looking for some expert input on a large gull I found at my study site of Rainham landfill, Greater London, last Friday (14th June). A one-year-old bird, in essence it seemed to have strong visual elements of both Caspian and Lesser Black-backed Gull - e.g. rather long, slender bill and very white head, neck and underparts with prominent hindneck streaking, but rather dark greyish 'upper' saddle with distinctive dark shaft streaks to the feathers. In terms of moult, it has progressed to dropping p4, but interestingly the newly growing P1 and P2 appear dark grey and very adult-like - surely odd for a typical one-year-old Lesser Black-backed (ssp fuscus excluded), and both odd and too dark for Caspian of the same age. My initial question then is can graellsii or intermedius LBBG exceptionally acquire adult-like feathers at this age? I know that both fuscus and heuglini can be a year 'advanced' in plumage terms. For a number of reasons the former doesn't seem a good fit; the latter might be better, and there are some quite similar individuals on Gull-research.org and in Olsen and Larsson (2003), but perhaps there is perhaps a more logical explanation than such a way-out-of-range candidate. Coupled with the Caspian-type elements, it strikes me as a potentially interesting bird. Structurally and in terms of darkness of mantle shade I think Yellow-legged is unlikely - so is a hybrid the best option, or something more exotic?
Hope you can help with this one,
With thanks
Dominic Mitchell