The kelp gull, Larus dominicanus, which is widely
distributed around the southern hemisphere, has become established in
Australia only in the past half-century. The greatest numbers of kelp gulls in
Australia are now found in south-eastern Tasmania in sympatry with the two
endemic species, the morphologically similar Pacific gull,
L. pacificus, and the smaller silver gull,
L. novaehollandiae. We examined populations of the three
species in this area. We surveyed large refuse tips and specific shoreline
sites in the Hobart area regularly during the winter months in 1981 and again
in 1992, recording numbers of each species, and age classes of kelp and
Pacific gulls. Between the two survey periods, the number of Pacific gulls and
the total number of all gulls present at refuse tips remained unchanged. There
was, however, a marked increase in the number of kelp gulls at tips,
equivalent to an annual rate of increase of 22.8%, and a corresponding
decrease in the number of silver gulls. Kelp gulls of all ages were
over-represented at refuse tips, while adult Pacific gulls fed preferentially
at more natural shoreline sites. At shoreline sites, adult Pacific gulls
appeared to exclude kelp gulls from small bays in 1981, but kelp gulls were
present in most of these bays eleven years later. Reducing access to food at
refuse tips may be an effective means of controlling the kelp gull population
in this area.
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