Pacific gull - meaning and definition. What is Pacific gull
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What (who) is Pacific gull - definition

SPECIES OF BIRD
Larus pacificus; Pacific Gull
  • Adult and juveniles, Cape Woolamai, Victoria
  • Juvenile Pacific Gull in flight, Cape Woolamai, Victoria
  • Juvenile

Stephen Gull         
BRITISH PHYSICIST
Steve Gull; Gull, Stephen
Stephen Gull is a British physicist based at St John's College, Cambridge credited, together with Anthony N. Lasenby, Joan Lasenby and Chris J.
Hartlaub's gull         
Hartlaub's gull (Chroicocephalus hartlaubii), also known as the king gull, it is a small gull. It was formerly sometimes considered to be a subspecies of the silver gull (C.
Kumlien's gull         
  • A pale-extreme first cycle Kumlien's gull photographed in Toronto, Ontario: Birds with white wingtips such as this may not be separable from nominate ''L. glaucoides''.
Kumlien's gull (Larus glaucoides kumlieni) is a subspecies of the Iceland gull. It is a large gull which breeds in the Arctic regions of Canada.

Wikipedia

Pacific gull

The Pacific gull (Larus pacificus) is a very large gull, native to the coasts of Australia. It is moderately common between Carnarvon in the west, and Sydney in the east, although it has become scarce in some parts of the south-east, as a result of competition from the kelp gull, which has "self-introduced" since the 1940s.

Much larger than the ubiquitous silver gull, and nowhere near as common, Pacific gulls are usually seen alone or in pairs, loafing around the shoreline, steadily patrolling high above the edge of the water, or (sometimes) zooming high on the breeze to drop a shellfish or sea urchin onto rocks.