The larger California (commonly occurs alongside the ring-billed in the west) is a 4-cycle gull with a stouter bill and dark eyes in all ages. The adult California has slightly darker medium gray ...
Gulls are a little scary. They frighten me. I don’t mean literally, in a Hitchcockian sense. The nightmare comes in trying to ...
The types commonly seen in the Midwest are laughing gulls and ring-billed gulls. Neither species depends solely on ocean habitats. They often feed and nest around inland lakes or rivers.
The herring gull, a large gull with a gray back and yellow beak, is probably the most common one you've seen on the beach. Ring-billed gulls are smaller and you'll likely see them in parking lots.
Part of a complex of similar gulls, this bird closely resembles the Herring Gull or Ring-billed Gull, and is intermediate between those two in size. It nests around lakes in the interior of the west, ...
Author says gull species are amazingly adaptive, and the Great Lakes area is a perfect spot to find many of them.
Dedicated birders reset their lists in January and challenge themselves to find 100 avian species in the depth of winter and ...
Winter is one of the best times to visit Hayle Estuary, when you can see a vast flocks of Teals and Wigeons and maybe a vagrant Ring-billed Gull from North America. Every year, up to 18,000 migrant ...
Many years, ring-billed gulls are the most common wintering gull in Kansas, having moved southward from nesting areas in central Canada and some places in the American West. Like many birds, ringbills ...
Often the most common and widespread gull in North America, especially inland, and numbers are probably still increasing. Sociable at all seasons; concentrations at nesting colonies or at winter ...