Abstract

SUMMARYHerring Gulls nesting on rooftops in South Shields and Sunderland were observed during 1974–76. These colonies, then around 200 pairs in each town, have expanded rapidly despite culls. Ringing results identified the Forth area as an important source of recruits, and also suggested that females are more likely to breed away from their natal area than males. It is clear from the high breeding success that these towns provide favourable alternatives to more typical breeding sites. The gulls in the towns nest at low densities, other than on flat roofs. Their breeding success, averaging 1.2–1.6 chicks per pair, was higher than that recorded at more typical colonies, and on structurally isolated rooftop sites was almost double that on flat roofs. This high success is attributed to the absence of cannibalism in these small colonies and the lack of territorial aggression at the structurally isolated sites.

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