Laughing Gull in alternate or also called breeding plumage
Laughing Gull in basic plumage, from late August till early spring


Text and Photos by Peter Vankevich

The Laughing Gull, Larus atricilla, is the most common black-hooded gull that can easily be seen along the coasts of  the Carolinas, especially flying along the ferries to Hatteras and back.  They prefer to breed on islands without predators.  During the late 18th and 19th century they were in danger of extinction due to the harvesting of feathers and eggs. 

Once they received protective status, their numbers rebounded.  Historically, the Laughing Gull was the only breeding gull species in North Carolina. In recent decades it has been joined by Herring and Great Black-backed gulls as breeders, all in coastal areas. Today, one of their threats is the increasing population of these larger and more aggressive gulls that will feed on their eggs and chicks.

They are named because their call in flight sounds like a loud laugh.

I chose this bird for September because at this time of year, they molt and lose their black hoods leaving the plumage around the head to have a smudgy look.

Many years ago when I started birding, I visited the island of Chincoteague, Virginia in August and again in September. I thought that the Laughing Gulls that were so common a few weeks earlier must have migrated. After some study of the Peterson Field Guide to the Birds and, more importantly, some field observation, I realized that the gulls without the black hoods were one and the same.

 When this molt occurs, you can tell them apart from the similar sized Ring-billed Gulls by their darker slate-colored mantles (backs), black bills and their legs are reddish black to black. The paler Ring-billed Gulls have yellow legs.

Occasionally you may see Laughing flying circles over the village feeding on insects; and in late fall they sometimes will land on the cedar trees to feed on their berries.

For a gull, they do not like cold weather. I compile both Ocracoke and the Portsmouth Island Christmas Bird Counts (CBC) that take place usually just before New Year’s Day.’   If the preceding weeks are cold, we find very few of them present.  Last year, a group of fifteen or more observers managed to find only two birds on Ocracoke and three on Portsmouth Island. They return in breeding plumage in March.

Best time to see: March into December. A few can be seen in January and February

Where: Anywhere on the island.

Listen: The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology has a variety of Red Knot recordings. Click here to listen.

Birds of the Outer Banks Checklist

As you may imagine, the Laughing Gull is named after its call which sounds na bit like ha-ha-ha ha-haaaaaa. Since I don’t have any cultural references  for these guys, I’ll play off its name and tell one of the two funny bird jokes I know. (Yes, the other involves a parrot and you won’t read it  here.)  A guy was caught roasting four Bald Eagles. He begs for mercy from the court. “Your honor, I got lost in the woods for two days and stumbled  across this eagle’s nest. It was them or me; I was starving.” The judge frowned, “I’m not sure I buy this, but I’m fining you only $250. Case dismissed.”  A few moments later, the judge calls him back and says quietly, “I’m a hunter, just between you and me, how did they taste.”  The defendant’s eyes light up and he says, “The best I can describe it, your Honor, the taste is a cross between a Whooping Crane and a Spotted Owl.”

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