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Hybridisation in gulls

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Hybridisation in gulls
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Hybridisation in gulls occurs quite frequently, although to varying degrees depending on the species involved.

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Nesting Western x Glaucous-winged gull hybrid, colloquially known as the "Olympic Gull".

Hybrid large white-headed gulls

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Hybrids among the smaller gulls

  • The most common hybrid found among smaller gulls in Europe is between black-headed gull and Mediterranean gull. Hybrids of this combination are occasionally reported on the northwestern edge of the breeding range of Mediterranean gull.[7]
  • Hybrid Mediterranean gull × common gull has also been recorded more rarely;[7] one such gull was seen in Lincolnshire in 2002.[8]
  • A bird seen in December 2001 at Belhaven Bay, Lothian, and present each winter since (until at least 2005/6) is believed to be a hybrid between black-headed and common gulls.[9]
  • More rarely, hybrids have been reported between laughing gull and black-headed gull, laughing gull and ring-billed gull and possibly black-headed and ring-billed gull. All have been reported from eastern North America.
  • Common Gull is known to have hybridised with Ring-billed Gull in Northern Ireland.[10]
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See also

References

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