Hi all:

At Nick's request, I have looked at the pix available of the bird that Scott 
Rashid found yesterday, and I must respectfully disagree with him about the 
bird's age and I am not sure that I agree with his species ID, at least in 
whole.  The pix available of the beast are not the best and any analysis is 
restricted in its definitiveness by the poor quality of the pix.  With that 
said, though, I will go ahead and discuss what look to me to be relevant 
features visible in these pix and referable to species ID.

1)  I don't feel that the beast is a "molt-retarded second-cycle" gull for a 
number of reasons that the bird's plumage makes fairly certain.  However, 
understanding my rationale requires a not-short-enough primer in gull plumage 
development and molting strategies, and here it is.

Most northern hemisphere-breeding four-year gull species (those scheduled to 
achieve adult plumage in their fourth year) conduct a preformative molt in 
fall/early winter, replacing juvenal head and (some) back plumage, but 
retaining nearly all juvenal wing plumage -- particularly the flight feathers 
-- and tail, along with some/much/most of the juvenal underparts feathering.  
It has been shown that the high-arctic breeding species, specifically Thayer's 
and Iceland, conduct very little of that molt (if any), instead, having most of 
the plumage change in their first cycle being part of the first prealternate 
molt conducted in late winter/spring.  Thus, first-cycle Thayer's and Iceland 
gulls in Colorado in Nov-Dec (and usually much later) are still wholly in 
juvenal plumage.  They are fairly fresh and have brown heads concolorous with 
their brown necks and backs.  The Lake Estes gull does not match that 
appearance, having a whitish head with some odd gray patches.  Another key 
point is that juvenal primaries in large gulls are narrower and more-pointed 
than those of older ages of gulls, an excellent feature to assess the age of 
problematic individuals.

After completing their (fairly limited) prealternate molt in spring, they 
initiate their second prebasic molt in late spring/early summer and replace all 
feathers.  Such birds should then be intermediate in appearance between juv and 
adult -- having whitish head, at least some adult-type gray in the back, and 
variable amounts of brown underparts feathering.  Additionally, bill color 
changes in this time to be bicolored, often with the pale base being more 
extensive than the dark tip.  A scruffy, but reasonable example of such can be 
found here (http://www.flickr.com/photos/guylmonty/89023691/).

If the Lake Estes gull were to be a "molt-retarded second-cycle," it would have 
to have skipped its second prebasic molt.  However, such gulls are still 
wearing their juvenal flight feathers and much of their juvenal body plumage, 
particularly the wing coverts and scapulars, which are subject to extreme 
bleaching and wear, particularly when discussing Thayer's Gull, most of which 
winter on or near Pacific Ocean beachs, exposed to salt water and the abrading 
effects of sand and, for some/many, the bright, bleaching effects of southern 
California sun.  This bird is not at all bleached, and not at all worn.  In 
fact, the bird's outer primaries look to be juvenal primaries -- narrow, 
pointed -- and they are not at all worn, in fact, retaining the typical 
pale-fringed pattern of juvenal Thayer's Gull outer primaries.  This gull is 
not a second-cycle gull.

2) If the bird is a first-cycle gull, we have new problems.  As noted above and 
by Nick (http://www.pbase.com/quetzal/mysterygullad), this bird has a whitish 
head with some odd gray bits, a very sloped forehead, and very flat crown, all 
of which features are fine for a Glaucous-winged Gull in its first November.  
Unfortunately, that bird's bill is WAAAY too small to belong to a 
Glaucous-winged Gull.  In fact, it's nearly perfect for a Thayer's Gull, but 
that head plumage is not that of a Thayer's Gull in its first November, and 
I've already shown that it cannot be an older Thayer's Gull.  Impasse.

I think that this is another gull that many birders consider anathema:  an 
unidentified and unidentifiable bird.  If I had to throw a possibility out 
there, I would consider Glaucous-winged x Thayer's Gull, as the bird seemingly 
has features of both species.  However, personally, I would call it 
"Interesting."  I would greatly appreciate Steve Mlodinow's thoughts on this 
beast, with his extensive experience in the Pacific Northwest, even if he 
thinks that I'm off my rocker.

Respectfully,

Tony

Tony Leukering
currently Smith Point, TX, but heading back to Villas, NJ, soon

 

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