26 



GULLS AND TERNS 



Fig. 44. Wing of Frauklin Gull. 



with subterminal band of dusky ; rest of 

 tail, under parts, forehead, and eyelids 

 white. Length : 18.50-15.00, wing 11.25, 

 bill 1.30, tarsus 1.60. 



Distribution. — Interior of North 

 America, breeding' from Iowa north into 

 Canada ; mig-rating- south to Peru. 



Nest. — On broken-down rushes in shal- 

 low water, made larg'ely of grasses and 

 rushes. Eggs : usually 3. 



In the northern plains and prairie country Franklin gulls are of 

 the greatest economic importance, the immense flocks living mainly 

 on grasshoppers and other destructive insects. At times a white 

 horde will descend upon a ploughed field, a band of them following 

 at the heels of the ploughman, while long white lines cover the 

 mellow furrow^s. Recognizing the ploughman as a friend, the birds 

 only get out of his way to let him pass, waiting for him to turn up 

 a fresh supply of food for them. In Utah their services are so well 

 appreciated that Brigham Young used to offer up prayers that they 

 be sent to destroy the grasshoppers that infested the land. One 

 often sees flocks of fifty to five hundred catching grasshoppers on 

 the wing, wheeling, diving, and rising, till at a distance the white 

 flock suggests a wild flurry of snowflakes. When the meal is over 

 the birds disband, to scatter out among the sloughs, drift on lazy 

 wings over the lakes, or float idly on the surface of the water. 



Vernon Bailey. 



60. Larus Philadelphia {Ord). Bonaparte Gull, 



Adults in summer. — Bill and head black ; mantle delicate pearl gray ; 

 three outer quills chiefly white, outer 

 web of the first, and terminal portion of 

 all, black ; tail and under parts white ; 

 feet orang-e red. Adults in winter : head 

 white, ting-ed with g'ray behind and with 

 a dusky spot on ear coverts ; feet pale 

 flesh color. Young : top of head, back, 

 and spot on ear coverts dusky ; sides of 

 head, neck, and under parts white, in- 

 cluding' tail coverts and base of tail; 



band across end of tail blackish, feathers tipped with white. Length : 12- 



14. wing- 10.25, bill 1.20. 



Distribution. — North America, breeding far northward ; south to western 



Mexico. 



Mr. Henshaw states that the Bonaparte gull is not uncommon in 

 San Diego Bay in December, though he thinks it winters mainly to 

 the southward. 



Mr. Loomis has seen the gulls at Monterey during their migrations 

 in November and May. He says that "although Avhite-throated 

 birds with the tail-band were in the majority, and pied-headed ones 



Fig. 45. 



