Greetings All

Sorry to be a bit harsh, but to focus on the leg color of the Slaty-backed Gull 
(SBGU) based on from fuzzy poorly lit photos is a great silliness. Comments 
based on experience with a single bird is rash, at best. For instance, look at 
the SBGU at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S32827708


Leg color is famously variable in gulls, based on age, hormones, even 
temperature. In the Pacific NW, where these beasts are regular, we paid little 
attention to the leg color of a potential SBGU. And also note that observers of 
this bird did note that the legs were brighter pink than surrounding Herring 
Gulls


Indeed, as with any gull, confident diagnosis is based on a set of marks, as 
any given mark is variable within any given species. 


The short wings, presence of a secondary skirt, dull yellow and proportionately 
gentle bill, large chested and small headed build, prominent dusky smudge 
around a staring white eye, pink legs, broad tertial and scapular crescents, 
broad white trailing edge to wing, and primary pattern (some of these marks 
seen at close range, others at distance, many both) form basis for a solid ID


Part of the problem is that there have been a number of reports clearly NOT 
referring to the original bird which had minimal red and no black on bill. 


I have not seen a convincing description of this bird since 23 December, which 
does not mean subsequent sightings have been in error. Clearly, birds with big 
bills, prominent red, or any black refer to a different bird than that 
originally seen. Birds with bulky heads, likewise.


Best Regards
Steven Mlodinow

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