Somehow, roof-nesting gulls have become something
of a problem throughout the UK. And Peter Rock argues that
the situation looks set to get worse
Almost every town and city in Britain has a population of roof-nesting
gulls, and with a growth rate of some 13 per cent a year it won't
be that long before all of the UK's towns and cities support growing
gull colonies.1 For those living or working in an area which has
been colonised by gulls, there are good reasons for complaint. Gulls
are noisy, especially during courtship and chick rearing, and they
produce large quantities of excrement, some of it deliberately aimed
at humans, creating health fears. They build nests in gutters, which
invariably get rain washed into down pipes causing blockages, and
they are aggressive. Stories about gulls stealing food from the
hands of tourists, terrorising workers on roofs and even striking
bystanders on the street are time and again reported in various
local media.
The upshot of all of this gull activity is, of course, a rising
level of complaints to the environmental services departments of
most authorities. Once the media becomes involved though (with a
cull being the most frequently proposed solution), questions begin
to be asked about what is being done about the situation. With this
in mind, some clear and pragmatic information on the issues and
some practical suggestions seem necessary, if not overdue.
While there are other gull species nesting on rooftops (Great Black-backed
Gull, Common Gull and Kittiwake etc) numbers are tiny in comparison
to the Herring Gull and Lesser Black-backed Gull. These two closely-related
species are large, weigh around a kilo and have a wingspan of some
four and a half feet.2 They are
also very long-lived birds, with the record being almost 35 years3,
and are very good at surviving from year to year (adult mortality
is less than 5 per cent). Generally speaking, they breed for the
first time at age four. However, in town, third year birds breed
commonly - a sign that the colony is expanding.
The breeding season runs from March to the end of July. One attempt
is made per season and three eggs are laid. In urban situations,
this usually means that pairs will bring off three young each year.
Pairing for life adds stability to their breeding patterns and,
even if this is only 10 years, a pair could raise 30 offspring.
This exceptional breeding success explains the exponential, national
growth rate of 13 per cent. It should not be forgotten that to maintain
a stable population in any species, including humans, all that is
necessary is for each individual to reproduce itself once in its
lifetime. Urban gulls are doing far better than this.
The large gulls are supreme opportunists and will take advantage
of whatever becomes available. If it is edible, they will eat it.
In town, they never turn down the scraps really intended for swans,
ducks and pigeons and are expert in robbing these birds of their
meals. Ample street lighting is provided to enable them to pick
up the discarded take-aways thrown down by late night revellers
well before the street cleaners even have a chance to clear up.
But, their major feeding takes place out of town and may be some
distance away - principally landfills (refuse)4 and green fields
(invertebrates).5
Strictly speaking, this issue goes back to before the Second World
War with a tiny number of records from small fishing villages.6
The key event though, was undoubtedly the passing of The Clean Air
Act in 1956. The Act forbade the burning of rubbish at tips, instead
it required operators to cover the tip face with inert material
at the end of a day's tipping. It was an open invitation to the
gulls and populations rose by fifteen fold by the early 1970s.7
This sudden and massive increase in gull populations resulted in
traditional colonies being outgrown. The gulls had to find other
breeding grounds and our buildings, from a gull's point of view,
are little more than cliff-sided islands.
The gulls soon found urban living to be highly advantageous - there
are no predators, very little disturbance on rooftops, and critically,
high availability of large food supplies fairly close at hand.8
Growing chicks demand high energy, high protein food - and lots
of it.5 Without this quality of
food, breeding success would be considerably lower.
The most prominent gull colonies in Britain (those with more than
1,000 pairs) started in the late 1960s and early 1970s. In Bristol,
the situation started in 1972 with one pair of Herring Gulls - there
are now around 1,200 pairs. Gloucester, with 2,400 pairs9
had three pairs of Lesser Black-backs in 196810
which now dominate all colonies in the Severn Estuary area. Aberdeen,
with 3,500 pairs, is the biggest colony in Britain, but colonies
of around 500 pairs11,12 are to
be found in many places. New colonies are quietly establishing themselves
throughout the country, but it is not until these grow to about
50 pairs that they start to impinge on human activity.13
There are two reasons why gulls are unlike all of the other "problem
species". First, gulls are not confined to a single centre
of activity. They move widely and are perfectly capable of making
a round trip of 100km in search of food in only a few hours. Second,
they are considerably more intelligent than most and despite the
best efforts of pest control agencies to deter or remove them colonies
have continued to expand. Thus, it has to be concluded that the
vast majority of control and deterrence methods and equipment are
ineffective and many of these have been costly mistakes for those
who have purchased them.
Plastic Eagle Owls seem to decorate many of our roofs up and down
the country. Why is this? The gulls just ignore them! The same goes
for streamers and other waving structures, balloons showing large
eyes, loud, sudden noises and even fireworks. Spikes in rows, tensioned
wires and other wire structures are also ignored.
The playing of distress calls and the flying of birds of prey are
interesting methods and are plausible. However, while these methods
appear to work in the first instance, it is usually not long before
the gulls get used to them. They quickly come to recognise the distress
call, even when speakers are moved around. Though remaining attentive,
they do not allow it to interfere with the serious business of breeding.
It is a case of shaken, but not stirred. Birds of prey do intimidate
gulls and the gulls will get up into the air because it is safer
to be moving than stationary. However, birds of prey can only fly
for short periods and, more importantly, there is safety in numbers
for a gull colony.
All gull colonies put up with predators in the wild, several of
which (Great Black-backed Gulls, Skuas etc) breed right in the heart
of seabird colonies and are tolerated. It should also be said that
there are towns where Peregrines breed alongside successful gull
colonies. As a final word on birds of prey, what happens when the
prey turns predator? Records of gulls attacking all sorts of predators
are legion and the handlers of birds of prey would be well advised
to consider the risks involved in flying their birds.
Egg smashing and nest raking simply result in the gulls rebuilding
and relaying. However, continual, daily nest removal throughout
the season will effectively prevent gulls from nesting on a roof.
This is also true of covering a roof with netting. However, by removing
gulls from one roof, you encourage them to move onto nearby roofs.
Thus, creating problems for others. At some point in the future,
it may result in litigation.
Another option is culling - poisoning, narcotising (and then dispatching
the drugged birds) or shooting. Before considering these methods
it would be wise to refer to the Wildlife and Countryside Act. Both
of the urban gull species are in a special schedule which allows
property owners to engage authorised personnel to carry out such
services, provided the species involved clearly present a threat
to public health and safety, or to aircraft. Nuisance, alone, is
not considered to be a reasonable justification. The interpretation
of threat, however, leads to a grey area. For instance, though gulls
do carry unpleasant pathogens such as salmonella, campylobacter,
e-coli etc, it has, so far, not been demonstrated that they are
vectors of disease in humans.14
Culling gulls in an urban situation is fraught with all sorts of
potential difficulties. For instance, discharging firearms in a
built-up area would cause a great deal of concern - and not just
to the police. Poisoning would very likely engage the minds of the
Health and Safety Executive, not only for operatives, but also for
passers-by when moribund gulls fall into the street. Further, the
efficacy of culling is dependent on several years' concerted action.
During a persistent cull on the Isle of May, it was noticed that
young birds were taking up territories previously occupied by adults.15
In other words, if you make a hole in a niche, somebody else will
fill it.
But, by far the most difficult situation to deal with would be
public reaction. Britain, it is said, is a nation of animal lovers
and trying to solve the problem at this serious level would, almost
certainly, result in heated debate and, possibly, in direct action.
One local authority in the north-east of England was unable to renew
its licence to cull, mainly due to the efforts of a strong-willed
and articulate lobby of town residents.
What seems to be forgotten in this issue is that, for the gulls,
successful breeding is far and away the most important aspect of
their lives and that their investment in it is considerable. They
will not easily relinquish their grasp on a breeding attempt. Dealing
with all manner of threats and avoiding them is thoroughly ingrained
in the nature of these birds - they have survived in this way for
thousands of years. Were there an easy "cure" to this
issue, it would already have been discovered and there would be
considerably fewer, or no roof-nesting by gulls at all in Britain
- or in the other countries where it occurs. Forming sensible -
and sensitive - strategies for the management of urban gulls is
going to take time and research.
A very great deal is already known about the ecology of the Herring
and Lesser Black-backed Gull, but it has all been derived from traditional,
wild colonies. There is almost nothing in the literature about urban
gull ecology. This is because, apart from the work carried out by
the author, there have been no studies into urban breeding by the
large gulls in Britain. Some of the science has already been done
and more is planned.
Since 1980, the author has colour-ringed some 5,000 gull nestlings
in Bristol and these individually-marked birds have generated in
excess of 20,000 post-fledging observations.16
Less than 2 per cent of Bristol-ringed gulls return to the wild
to breed. Instead, generally speaking, they return to Bristol once
they are old enough to breed (males), or seek out other urban colonies
(females). Female gulls ringed in Bristol currently breed in all
of the region's urban colonies. By the same token, females from
other colonies must be recruiting into the Bristol population and
this must also be the case in every other urban colony up and down
the country.
What is perfectly clear, therefore, is that the issue of urban
gulls is not just a local one, but a regional one. If the problems
associated with urban breeding are to be understood and dealt with,
regional strategies will have to be formed. This will require regional
co-operation between authorities. How should regional strategies
be developed? Instead of vainly hoping that pest control agencies
will solve all of the problems, the first step must be to get to
grips with the facts at a local level - in your authority. Once
these are known, there has to be a proper exchange of information
and sharing of costs. Stage one, is to accurately assess the number
of breeding pairs and the demography of the colony. This assessment
will act as a base line from which colonial growth and changes/expansion
in the colony can be monitored. It will also clearly demonstrate
to all that the problem is being investigated.
Stage two is to identify and assess the importance of local food
resources used by the gulls from your colony and other colonies.
Typically, these will be landfills, refuse transfer stations, pig
farms, chicken waste drilling sites etc. The natural food gathering
areas such as green fields and coast/river feeding sites are important
and the scavenging areas in town and in the suburbs cannot be left
out.
Stage three has to be the precise understanding of the dynamics
of urban breeding alluded to above. How, exactly, does it all work?
This can be achieved by colour-ringing nestlings, although it will
take three to four years (as birds mature into breeding condition)
to acquire the necessary results. It has to be nestlings because,
unlike adults, only their origin is certain. It will then be possible
to calculate patterns of recruitment. This is already happening
in Bath and Cheltenham. It is hoped that Gloucester, Worcester and
Bridgend will also come on board this year.
With this information in place, identifying the origins of recruits
will be relatively straightforward. It will also be straightforward
to discover which other towns your colony is supplying. There will
be some areas in your authority where breeding activity generates
a high level of complaints, the majority of which are about noise.
The mitigating strategy in this instance is to sterilise the eggs.
Sterilising eggs will, effectively, encourage the adults to incubate
rather longer than the normal 28 to 30 days. After this, pairs will
abandon the season's breeding attempt. Gull noise is moderate during
courtship, but at its highest (along with aggression towards humans)
after chicks have hatched. Incubation is a quiet affair and birds
are discreet and often rather secretive, too.
Sterilisation involves entirely immersing the eggs in a light mineral
oil (such as paraffin oil) and putting them back into the nest.
This method is only a palliative. It will not remove the gulls and
will need to be undertaken every year. However, it does answer some
of the more pressing complaints by significantly reducing noise
and it could generate income. Theoretically, it also reduces the
number of potential recruits in future years, but by how many would
require proper assessment.
Another method, though probably difficult to achieve in most situations,
is to paint the roof red. Observations from Bristol City football
ground show that prior to stand rooves being painted red, gulls
bred, whereas after, breeding stopped. As a postscript, the author
has analysed some of his data and the findings are significant.
Lesser Black-backed Gulls, traditionally long distance migrants,
are nowadays increasingly staying in Britain in winter. Up to 25
per cent of adult birds are doing this. Therefore, the prospect
is that instead of having gulls on roofs for just five months of
the year, it will be rather longer. Let's get the science done!
Peter Rock has been studying Bristol's roof-nesting gulls
since 1980 and throughout this time has been involved in international
gull research at a high level. For the last 15 years he has been
the co-ordinator for the colour-marking of the large gulls for all
of the Bird Ringing Schemes in Europe (Euring). He is the author
of several scientific papers on the subject (includingthe Lesser
Black-backed Gull pages in the Migration Atlas) and has acted as
consultant to various authorities on roof-nesting gulls. Contact
by e-mail: pete.rock@blueyonder.co.uk
The author has applied, in conjunction with Bristol University,
for a NERC grant to look into the feeding regimes of urban gulls.
If successful, not only will it result in a great deal more knowledge
on urban breeding, it will also point clearly at directions for
the mitigation and management of urban gulls.
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