88 



LONG-WINGED SWIMMERS. 



the ground, sometimes in trees, composed of 

 weeds and sticks; eggs, 2-4, brown mottled 

 Fig. 57. Fig. ^58. ^ith darker. Food, which 

 XX^>/f Mp^y consists of fishes, other sea 

 animals, and floating gar- 

 bage, is securred by the 

 birds swooping downward 

 at an angle, and, although 

 when catching living fish, 

 gulls occasionally become 

 submerged, I have never 



Jaegers 1-2, Parasitic. Long-tailed, seen OUC dlvC perpeudlcU- 



larly. Some eat dead fishes which are cast 

 on shore, and a few feed upon insects. Cries, 



Fig. 5». 



Ring-billed Gull. 



often harsh but sometimes modulated and 

 not unmusical. Immature plumage quite 

 unlike the adult. 



