Sabine’s gull

Despite their elegant looks, they are fierce parents

Alaska Region U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service


Sabine’s gull

EXEWCRENVUNTLCDDNE

Despite their elegant looks, they are fierce parents

Population 340,000

While most gulls follow a fairly standard color palette of white and grey, Sabine’s gull breaks the mold with a striking, geometric look. During the breeding season, they sport a slate-grey “hood” that is perfectly outlined by a thin, jet-black collar. However, their most iconic feature—and what makes them technically different from every other gull—is the tri-colored wing pattern. In flight, their wings display a bold, high-contrast arrangement of grey, black, and a massive white triangle. This “checkerboard” effect is so distinct that even a beginner can identify it from miles away as they skip over the ocean waves.

What truly separates Sabine’s gull from its more common relatives is its tern-like personality. While many gulls are famous for being bold scavengers that hang around parking lots or docks, Sabine’s gull is a refined, oceanic specialist. They have a buoyant, graceful flight style—dropping and rising like a piece of driftwood—and they rarely ever set foot on land except to breed. They even have a slightly forked tail, a feature usually reserved for terns or swallows, which helps them maneuver with incredible precision as they snatch tiny fish and plankton right off the surface of the water without ever stopping.

The “humanized” side of this bird is its status as a world-class marathoner. Once they leave their breeding grounds in the high Arctic, they don’t just migrate; they embark on an epic journey that crosses hemispheres. Most Sabine’s gulls spend their winters in the “upwelling” zones off the coasts of South Africa or Peru, where cold, nutrient-rich water provides a constant feast. They are true “pelagic” birds, meaning they spend months on end out of sight of land, braving the massive swells of the open Atlantic and Pacific. They are the quiet adventurers of the bird world, choosing the solitude of the deep ocean over the noise of the coast.

Distribution

Country
Population est.
Status
Year
Comments
Angola
2020
Non-Breeding
Australia
2020
Vagrant
Austria
2020
Vagrant
Belgium
2020
Vagrant
Bermuda
2020
Vagrant
Brazil
2020
Passage
Bulgaria
2020
Vagrant
Cameroon
2020
Vagrant
Canada
2020
Passage
Cape Verde
2020
Passage
Chile
2020
Colombia
2020
Non-Breeding
Congo-Brazzaville
2020
Passage
Costa Rica
2020
Passage
Cuba
2020
Vagrant
Czechia
2020
Vagrant
Côte D’ivoire
2020
Passage
DR Congo (Kinshasa)
2020
Non-Breeding
Denmark
2020
Passage
Ecuador
2020
Non-Breeding
Egypt
2020
Vagrant
El Salvador
2020
Passage
Faroe Islands
2020
Passage
Finland
2020
Vagrant
France
2020
Passage
Gabon
2020
Vagrant
Gambia
2020
Passage
Germany
2020
Vagrant
Ghana
2020
Vagrant
Gibraltar
2020
Passage
Greenland
2020
Guatemala
2020
Passage
Guinea-Bissau
2020
Passage
Guinea
2020
Passage
Honduras
2020
Passage
Iceland
2020
Passage
Ireland
2020
Passage
Israel
2020
Vagrant
Italy
2020
Vagrant
Japan
2020
Vagrant
Jordan
2020
Vagrant
Korea
2020
Vagrant
Latvia
2020
Vagrant
Liberia
2020
Passage
Mauritania
2020
Passage
Mexico
2020
Passage
Morocco
2020
Passage
Namibia
2020
Non-Breeding
Netherlands
2020
Passage
Nicaragua
2020
Passage
Nigeria
2020
Vagrant
Norway
2020
Passage
Panama
2020
Peru
2020
Non-Breeding
Poland
2020
Vagrant
Portugal
2020
Passage
Romania
2020
Vagrant
Russia
2020
Saint Pierre
2020
Passage
Senegal
2020
Passage
Sierra Leone
2020
Passage
South Africa
2020
Non-Breeding
Spain
2020
Passage
Svalbard
2020
Breeding
Sweden
2020
Vagrant
Switzerland
2020
Vagrant
Togo
2020
Vagrant
Trinidad & Tobago
2020
Vagrant
UAE
2020
Vagrant
United Kingdom
2020
Passage
United States
2020
Passage

Anything we've missed?

Help us improve this page by suggesting edits. Glory never dies!

Suggest an edit

Get to know me

Terrestrial / Aquatic

Altricial / Precocial

Polygamous / Monogamous

Dimorphic (size) / Monomorphic

Active: Diurnal / Nocturnal

Social behavior: Solitary / Pack / Flock

Diet: Carnivore / Herbivore / Omnivore / Piscivorous / Insectivore

Migratory: Yes / No

Domesticated: Yes / No

Dangerous: Yes / No