152 GULLS 
88. Stercorarius longicaudus Vieill. LoNG-TAILED JAEGER. Ads. 
light phase.—Back, wings and tail slaty fuscous; top of head and lores 
nearly black; sides of head, back and sides of neck straw-yellow; throat 
sometimes washed with same color; underparts white; sides, lower belly, 
and crissum slaty fuscous; central tail-feathers extending about 7°00 beyond 
the others, the projecting ends narrow and pointed. (No dark phase of 
this species has been described.) Jm.—Similar in plumage to im. of S. 
parasiticus, but differing otherwise as pointed out under that species. L., 
21°00; W., 12°50; T., Ad., 12°00., Im., 5°50; B., 1:08. 
Range.—N. part of the N. Hemisphere. Breeds on Arctic islands of 
Europe and Asia, and coasts of Kotzebue and Norton sounds, n. Mackenzie, 
and n. Hudson Bay to n. Greenland; winters s. to Gibraltar and Japan; 
not rare in migration off New England; casual on the Pacific coast s. to 
Calif.; accidental in Man., Iowa, IIl., and Fla. 
Long Island, casual, Oct. 
Nest, a slight depression in the ground, sometimes scantily lined with 
grasses. Eggs, 2-3, similar in color to those of the preceding, 2°10 x 1°50. 
Date, Southern Greenland, June 1. 
5. Famity Larip#. Guuits AND Terns. (Figs. 23), 24.) 
This family contains about 100 species, divided equally between 
subfamily Larine (Gulls) and subfamily Sternine (Terns). They are 
distributed throughout the world. Some forty species inhabit North 
America. With few exceptions, they agree in possessing the marked 
characters of their respective subfamilies, under which they may be 
more conveniently treated. 
Subfamily Larine. Gulls. (Fig. 23b.). 
The fifty odd members of this subfamily are distributed throughout 
the world; twenty-five of them have been recorded from North America, 
where the greater number nest north of the United States; in Eastern 
North America, the Laughing Gull being the only species which nests 
south of latitude 41°. 
Franklin’s Gull is a bird of the Mississippi Valley, and many of 
the maritime species nest on the islands of inland lakes, where, indeed, 
they may be represented throughout the year; but, as a family, Gulls 
are true birds of the sea and its bays. They throng our harbors from 
early fall to late spring, and during this season are ever in attendance 
on coast-wise craft, and are not wanting in mid-ocean. 
Gulls average larger and stockier than Terns, and have less pointed, 
broader wings, and, as a rule, square tails. They procure their food 
largely by picking it from the surface of the water with their strong, 
hooked bills, not by plunging or darting, as do the Terns. They are 
among nature’s scavengers of the water, and perform a service of great 
value to man by devouring various forms of aquatic animals which, 
in dying, come to the surface. They also aid in freeing the waters of 
our harbors from the garbage which inevitably finds its way there. 
Although feeding thus on offal, most Gulls are highly predaceous and 
