Slaty-backed Gull
The Washington representatives of this family can be split into two groups, or subfamilies. The adaptable gulls are the most familiar. Sociable in all seasons, they are mainly coastal, but a number of species also nest inland. Many—but not all—are found around people. Gulls have highly variable foraging techniques and diets. Terns forage in flight, swooping to catch fish or insects. They dive headfirst into the water for fish. Although they are likely to be near water, they spend less time swimming than gulls.
General Description
This rare winter visitor is the same size as the Western Gull, which it also resembles in structure and general appearance. The adult has pink legs and a mantle a shade darker than our local race of Western Gull’s, although mantle color can be tricky to judge under field conditions. The head, neck, and upper breast are streaked in winter, whereas those of the Western Gull remain immaculate white (but beware of Western Gull x Glaucous-winged Gull hybrids, common in western Washington, which may have variable amounts of streaking in winter plumage). The eye of the adult Slaty-backed is usually but not always pale, rather like Herring Gull’s, while that of our northern race of Western Gull is usually but not always dark. In flight, the adult Slaty-backed shows less black, and more white, in the wingtips than Western and a relatively broader white trailing edge of the wing. [N.B.: The above descriptions are oversimplified. Field guides should be consulted—even more so for the immature plumages of the first three years of the bird’s life.]
A coastal resident of the northwest Pacific, the Slaty-backed Gull breeds from Siberia to northern Japan and winters from Japan south to Taiwan and east through the Bering Sea region to Alaska. Small numbers have bred in Alaska in recent years, and the species now shows up regularly in winter farther south along the West Coast. Washington’s first record was in 1986. The state now has 10 accepted records between mid-December and mid-March. All are from the Puget Lowlands, often at river mouths. Oregon has several records along the lower Columbia River, and Slaty-backed Gull is now annual in British Columbia.
Revised June 2007
Family Members
 Laughing GullLarus atricilla Laughing GullLarus atricilla
 Franklin's GullLarus pipixcan Franklin's GullLarus pipixcan
 Little GullLarus minutus Little GullLarus minutus
 Black-headed GullLarus ridibundus Black-headed GullLarus ridibundus
 Bonaparte's GullLarus philadelphia Bonaparte's GullLarus philadelphia
 Heermann's GullLarus heermanni Heermann's GullLarus heermanni
 Black-tailed GullLarus crassirostris Black-tailed GullLarus crassirostris
 Short-billed GullLarus canus Short-billed GullLarus canus
 Ring-billed GullLarus delawarensis Ring-billed GullLarus delawarensis
 California GullLarus californicus California GullLarus californicus
 Herring GullLarus argentatus Herring GullLarus argentatus
 Thayer's GullLarus thayeri Thayer's GullLarus thayeri
 Iceland GullLarus glaucoides Iceland GullLarus glaucoides
 Lesser Black-backed GullLarus fuscus Lesser Black-backed GullLarus fuscus
 Slaty-backed GullLarus schistisagus Slaty-backed GullLarus schistisagus
 Western GullLarus occidentalis Western GullLarus occidentalis
 Glaucous-winged GullLarus glaucescens Glaucous-winged GullLarus glaucescens
 Glaucous GullLarus hyperboreus Glaucous GullLarus hyperboreus
 Great Black-backed GullLarus marinus Great Black-backed GullLarus marinus
 Sabine's GullXema sabini Sabine's GullXema sabini
 Black-legged KittiwakeRissa tridactyla Black-legged KittiwakeRissa tridactyla
 Red-legged KittiwakeRissa brevirostris Red-legged KittiwakeRissa brevirostris
 Ross's GullRhodostethia rosea Ross's GullRhodostethia rosea
 Ivory GullPagophila eburnea Ivory GullPagophila eburnea
 Least TernSternula antillarum Least TernSternula antillarum
 Caspian TernHydroprogne caspia Caspian TernHydroprogne caspia
 Black TernChlidonias niger Black TernChlidonias niger
 Common TernSterna hirundo Common TernSterna hirundo
 Arctic TernSterna paradisaea Arctic TernSterna paradisaea
 Forster's TernSterna forsteri Forster's TernSterna forsteri
 Elegant TernThalasseus elegans Elegant TernThalasseus elegans
 
        
       
    
