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Rare migratory bird sighted on Kappad beach five years ago identified as Caspian Gull
Rare migratory bird sighted on Kappad beach five years ago identified as Caspian Gull

The Hindu

time6 days ago

  • Science
  • The Hindu

Rare migratory bird sighted on Kappad beach five years ago identified as Caspian Gull

Kozhikode-based ornithologist Abdulla Paleri has reported the sighting of a rare migratory bird for the first time in Kerala. The Caspian Gull, which often migrates to northwest India during winter, was sighted on Kappad beach in Kozhikode in February 2020. But it took Mr. Paleri five years to confirm the species and realise that it was indeed quite a miracle to find such a bird in Kerala. 'The Caspian Gull, usually found in Central Asia, visits northwestern India, such as Gujarat, in winter. It was sighted in Goa only once and never again in south India until this time,' Mr. Paleri said, adding that the bird must have straggled to Goa and Kerala, for which no specific reason has been identified. The Caspian Gull is very difficult to identify since it closely resembles the Steppe Gull, which regularly visits the Kerala coast every year. Hence, it was initially confusing for Mr. Paleri to notice minor variations in the nature of the species, such as the shape of the head and beak. He uploaded the images he had taken to the international community of gull experts for identification. After several months, two of the experts, Joachin Bertrand and Lou Bertalan, commented that it could be the Caspian Gull, considering features such as its wings, posture, and legs. Mr. Paleri further uploaded the images to eBird, an online platform for birders all over the world. Subsequently, two internationally acclaimed ornithologists Oscar Campbell and Hans Larsson confirmed it as a bird from the Caspian Gull species, and no expert has challenged the findings in the past five years. 'It usually migrates in very small groups. This one may have straggled off,' Mr. Paleri said. A straggler is a bird that irregularly goes off its normal migratory route or ground. The Caspian Gull (Larus cachinnans) is one of the rarest gulls to be seen in India. They move from the Black Sea to the Caspian Sea, then to southern and eastern Kazakhstan and western China. They winter in Asia and Africa, he added.

Country diary: As spring progresses, gulls become more and more raucous
Country diary: As spring progresses, gulls become more and more raucous

The Guardian

time06-03-2025

  • General
  • The Guardian

Country diary: As spring progresses, gulls become more and more raucous

There is a blackbird in the garden that starts singing around 5.30 every morning as the stars fade. He continues in phases during the day, prolonging his song into the dusk when the streetlamp comes on. His notes are set against a background of yawping, screaming cries, equally evocative in their way: the herring gulls (Larus argentatus) are back. They have been quiet all winter, drifting inland in loose, field-scavenging flocks. Now they have returned to stake out their rooftop nesting territories. Most of the adults are in pairs (they often mate for life), but one male is alone. He waits and watches, surveying the street with yellow eyes, chasing away other gulls that impinge on his domain. Occasionally, he pads slowly along his roof ridge with a deliberate and faintly scornful grace. Perhaps he has lost his mate, or maybe he is yet to find one. Herring gulls are long-lived birds that can reach 30 years old or more and don't usually start breeding until they are four. Whatever his age, this one is in full breeding plumage, the warm white of his head, breast and underparts contrasting with his cloud-grey back and upper wings. When folded, his black wingtips reveal a crisp line of white dots. Brightest of all is the loud daffodil of his strong beak, with its blood-red spot that will serve as a target for his chicks to peck and request food. Gulls are controversial town‑dwellers. As spring progresses, they become more and more raucous, yelping at all hours. A nest on your house can be an ordeal. They have little fear of humans and will defend their eggs and young aggressively if they feel threatened, targeting passersby with spatters of droppings or regurgitated food. Living near the coast, you learn by experience not to eat ice-cream unshielded on the beach in case a gull swoops and grabs. Sometimes they injure people and pets. Yet it's right that they are a protected species, one that it is against the law to harm or kill. Intelligent, voracious and messy, they are birds in our own image, whose behaviour is largely a result of human-made environmental changes. Under the Changing Skies: The Best of the Guardian's Country Diary, 2018-2024 is published by Guardian Faber; order at and get a 15% discount

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