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California Gull Identification

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The Four Keys to ID

  • Size & Shape

    The California Gull is a medium-sized gull with a round head. The bill is slender compared to other gull species. In flight the wings are long and pointed.

    Relative Size

    Larger than a Ring-billed Gull, smaller than a Herring Gull.

    Relative Sizecrow sizedcrow-sized

    Measurements
    • Both Sexes
      • Length: 18.5-21.3 in (47-54 cm)
      • Weight: 15.2-36.9 oz (430-1045 g)
      • Wingspan: 51.2 in (130 cm)

    Shape of the California Gull© Steven Mlodinow / Macaulay Library
  • Breeding adult California Gulls are white-headed gulls with a medium gray back, yellow legs, and a dark eye. Nonbreeding adults have brown streaking on the head. Adults have a yellow bill with small black ring and a red spot on the lower mandible—brighter on breeding gulls. In their first year, they are mottled brown and white and often have a paler face. The bill is pink with a black tip and the legs are pinkish. Second-year California Gulls are also mottled brown but begin to show gray on the back. They have a dark eye and bluish legs. Third-year gulls look very similar to adults.

    Color pattern of the California Gull
    © Brian Sullivan / Macaulay Library
  • California Gulls are strong, nimble fliers and opportunistic foragers; they forage on foot, from the air, and from the water. These social gulls breed in colonies and mix with other gull species along the coast in winter.

  • California Gulls breed on sparsely vegetated islands and levees in inland lakes and rivers. They forage in any open area where they can find food including garbage dumps, scrublands, pastures, orchards, meadows, and farms. In the winter they forage along the Pacific Coast and use mostly marine areas including mudflats, estuaries, deltas, and beaches.

    © John C Sullivan / Macaulay Library

Regional Differences

Two different subspecies of California Gull exist. The gulls that breed in the Great Basin region of the western United States are smaller and darker backed, and those breeding in the Great Plains are larger and paler.