Authors
Jerrold L Belant, Thomas W Seamans, Steven W Gabrey, Richard A Dolbeer
Publication date
1995/7/1
Journal
American Midland Naturalist
Pages
30-40
Publisher
University of Notre Dame
Description
We estimated the abundance of birds at three landfills in northern Ohio from May 1991-July 1992 recording 699,350 individuals of 42 species. Gulls (Larus spp.) comprised 94.5% of the birds recorded followed by European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris, 5.0%) and turkey vultures (Cathartes aura, 0.3%). Gulls were primarily of two species, ring-billed (L. delawarensis, 74.49%) and herring (L. argentatus, 25.50%). The mean number of gulls per observation during July-January was at least five times the mean number observed during other months. The combined monthly mean number of gulls at the three landfills peaked in August (>4000 birds), with gulls virtually absent in February. Total numbers, species composition and age composition of gulls varied seasonally in response to breeding, foraging and migratory behavior of local and regional populations. More than 98% of gulls observed were recorded on or within …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JL Belant, TW Seamans, SW Gabrey, RA Dolbeer - American Midland Naturalist, 1995