BTO Bird ID - Common & Herring Gull

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  • Опубликовано: 14 мар 2018
  • Love them or hate them, you can't (or shouldn't) ignore gulls. Build up your gull ID skills by learning to recognise two ideal reference species from this versatile and varied family: Common Gull and Herring Gull.
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Комментарии • 52

  • @chuckandevea.7652
    @chuckandevea.7652 3 года назад +8

    I love Seagulls, I can watch them for hours. They are pretty funny the things they do for food. They are awesome birds.

  • @mariea82
    @mariea82 4 года назад +3

    I love the absolutely hard facedness of them. They are such cheeky buggers

  • @ChristopherHarle41048
    @ChristopherHarle41048 6 лет назад +17

    Thank you. I love birds but often cannot, with confidence, identify them. Such videos are very helpful to me.

  • @birdshenanigans8506
    @birdshenanigans8506 6 месяцев назад +1

    Common gulls are the sweetest

    • @Snupsedyret
      @Snupsedyret 3 месяца назад

      Yea and they also has the cutest sounds

  • @princessmariasviatopolk-mi5027
    @princessmariasviatopolk-mi5027 5 лет назад +6

    I so enjoy watching the Seagulls on video. I love Seagulls.
    PRINCESS MARIA SVIATOPOLK- MIRSKI/STRATFORD EAST LONDON.

    • @VanlifeHQ
      @VanlifeHQ 5 лет назад +1

      I to love them absolutely beautiful birds, Iv just reared one currently starting to fly FLEGG :) if u go to my channel your see him,

  • @deniecedonnafield1460
    @deniecedonnafield1460 6 лет назад +4

    I've been studying the ring Bill Seagull for over 18 years ~ it took me many years to realize the sex and the age! What you call Winter stages of one two three four five ~ I've only wanted to be influenced by the seagulls themselves not from others teaching me! Today I've learned some new things from others here on RUclips about seagulls! I'm fortunate that I have learned much of their language! I have also learned that they have sign language when they fly and also feet language! I have discovered with the ring bills it's one of the hardest life's to live as a bird! Unless you're being shot at! Thank you for your knowledge maybe one day I'll be able to teach mine!

  • @aimeedesign
    @aimeedesign 4 года назад +1

    I thought I was as good as I could be at identifying laridae species but after watching this I see where I was lacking knowledge! Thank you for the information 🙏

  • @LondonTreeSurgeons-Camden
    @LondonTreeSurgeons-Camden 6 лет назад +4

    Great addition to this wonderful series.

  • @jameshuang8824
    @jameshuang8824 4 года назад +3

    OMG ...I love these seagulls and birds dearly ... I am always wanted feed them ... missed them badly ..

  • @nicnak4475
    @nicnak4475 6 лет назад +2

    Excellent and very informative , thank you .

  • @anonymuz_guy9820
    @anonymuz_guy9820 5 лет назад +1

    they're also known as mew gulls here in North America and are usually seen with ring-billed and glaucous-winged gulls. Very informative video.

  • @JamesTaylor-yh9rl
    @JamesTaylor-yh9rl 5 лет назад +1

    i told a gull shes lovely and she got the message and put on a show

  • @dronespace
    @dronespace 6 лет назад +4

    Love these videos, great work

  • @PotentialTechniques
    @PotentialTechniques 3 года назад

    Thankyou to all involved in making this video happen.. This is very useful and very nicely done thankyou.

  • @andrewburke9390
    @andrewburke9390 4 года назад +2

    Brilliant, exactly what I need

  • @aarontietjen7172
    @aarontietjen7172 6 лет назад +1

    Many thanks for this video and all the others that you have put together. I'd love to see a yellow-legged & lesser black backed gull comparison.

    • @nickmoran182
      @nickmoran182 5 лет назад

      Thanks. We have one on the black-backed gulls [ ruclips.net/video/kZyMuqV-l9Y/видео.html ] but have yet to tackle the thornier issue of Lesser Black-backed cf. Yellow-legged. We'll consider adding this to the to-do list, though!

  • @hedgehog3900
    @hedgehog3900 3 года назад

    Argh Gulls. My kryptonite. This should help, thank you BTO.

  • @flintytheraccbold
    @flintytheraccbold 3 года назад +1

    There are great finches in the park near me that will land on my hand if I put food on it

  • @andreameyers4274
    @andreameyers4274 5 лет назад

    Thank You!!!

  • @rac6348
    @rac6348 4 года назад

    Came here after I saw a mako shark lunge out of the water and gulp down a swimming gull on my vacation in Florida lol

  • @anitanayak9793
    @anitanayak9793 4 года назад

    Good .. very ..I min very good😀👌👌👌

  • @ronsmith4836
    @ronsmith4836 4 года назад

    I notice there are less around than about a month ago in the UK, what is their migratory habits?

  • @TatraScrambler
    @TatraScrambler 6 месяцев назад +1

    That's easy, but how do you tell Larus argentatus from L. michahellis and L. cachinnans?

    • @TatraScrambler
      @TatraScrambler 6 месяцев назад

      Any useful tips on that, dear BTO?

  • @nicolaziliotto5374
    @nicolaziliotto5374 2 года назад

    I live in Venice and i love sea gulls

  • @aini9528
    @aini9528 6 лет назад

    BTOvideo yes but what 'is their language?' In my work I travel outside 3-4 hours every night and hear seagulls start their nightly routines of singing and making different sounds. I'd like to know what they're saying, is there any reference to what it is different seagull species are trying to convey to eachother?

    • @nickmoran182
      @nickmoran182 5 лет назад +1

      The best place to start would be a reference work such as The Birds of the Western Palearctic, which includes considerable information about when and how different vocalisations are used, particularly for well-studied groups such as gulls.

  • @Bryt25
    @Bryt25 4 года назад

    Are those yellow legs on the lesser black-backed gull? I see one like that in the park regularly, among the herring gulls.

    • @spiffcorgi
      @spiffcorgi 2 года назад

      Late reply but yes they have yellow legs. Not to be confused with the European version of the Herring Gull, the Yellow Legged Gull, whose back is more similar to Common Gull in colour. I'd be surprised if a vagrant Yellow Legged was at your park though. If it's noticeably dark-backed and yellow-legged, it's a Lesser Black Backed.

  • @ARlELATOM
    @ARlELATOM 4 года назад +1

    Lesson 1: Never call them seagulls

  • @gully7886
    @gully7886 5 лет назад +1

    I'm a herring gull!

    • @BlueZirnitra
      @BlueZirnitra 5 лет назад

      That's cool man, I'm friends with a few, good guys.

  • @masaa87
    @masaa87 6 лет назад

    A video on sparrowhawk and goshawk would be nice ;)

    • @nickmoran182
      @nickmoran182 5 лет назад

      Sure! In the meantime, there are some great comparison (still) images on the Birds in Flight website: (Northern) Goshawk - birds-in-flight.net/?p=6554 and (Eurasian) Sparrowhawk - birds-in-flight.net/?p=6570

  • @LengKingg
    @LengKingg 3 года назад

    4:33is that herring gull half a body

  • @ospreybird
    @ospreybird 2 года назад

    jonathon livingstone seagull :-)

  • @purplestarsxoxo
    @purplestarsxoxo 4 года назад

    Im a exspert at birds😉😉😉😉

  • @KingTriton1837
    @KingTriton1837 4 года назад

    Mean ass birds. They're all over the place where I live and they will stalk you if you are eating at the park my house. Lol.

  • @matchless22553
    @matchless22553 3 года назад

    I live on the S.E. coast of the UK, its said that herring gulls are endangered species, I don’t believe that they are numerous here growing in numbers every year. They say the cause is lack of food for them, Nonsense! they eat anything and everything, in our local park the ducks don’t get much of a look in.

  • @nataliiav2150
    @nataliiav2150 5 лет назад

    i love seagulls
    #seagullsrule

  • @BrettCaleb
    @BrettCaleb 7 дней назад

    This video is not clear enough

  • @conlangknow8787
    @conlangknow8787 3 года назад

    thats not a gull, thats a seagull

    • @Snupsedyret
      @Snupsedyret 3 месяца назад

      Thats not a genius, thats an idiot
      I mean it with you not the gulls

  • @michaelhocking7368
    @michaelhocking7368 3 года назад

    100

  • @xxxTIN0xxx
    @xxxTIN0xxx 4 года назад

    Herring Gulls are terrible. These birds have basically evolved. They invaded the cities and became predators killing pigeons, swifts, ducklings and they weirdest thing is that they overfly the city at night making those annoying chirps all night long. Between March and August they're absolutely unbearable. I've never seen the common gulls instead, I guess they still live by the sea and they live off of fishing.