HomeNewsLocal newsLaughing Gulls Try To Steal Fish From Brown Pelicans

Laughing Gulls Try To Steal Fish From Brown Pelicans

A laughing gull landed right on top of this brown pelican. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

I have seen laughing gulls drop down onto the backs of pelicans and try to grab fish as they fall from the edges of the pelicans’ pouches.

Sometimes fish do escape from a pelican’s mouth. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

A pelican will fly high over the beach scanning for movement and then dive quickly down into the water, scooping up small fish in its pouch. Then it will lift its head to drain the seawater out of the sides of its pouch before swallowing its catch. That’s the moment when the laughing gull will try to snatch a fish.

A laughing gull needs to get very close to the pelican’s pouch to check for dropped fish. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

I learned a catchy name for this behavior – kleptoparasitism.

 


The laughing gulls can be quite intrusive but pelicans are large birds, and an angry pelican can deliver a sharp bite with the hook at the end of its beak – though not when its mouth is full.

A pelican mostly uses its pouch like a fishing net. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

And when a laughing gull approaches from behind, it is hard for the pelican to get the gull off its back.

Sometimes it looks like the laughing gull is getting into a mating position. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

One passive pelican defensive strategy is to just keep its mouth closed until the laughing gull gets bored and goes away.

Are they sharing feelings? (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Another pelican strategy is to make itself look a big crazy turtle.

A laughing gull will eventually get fed up. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

I find it hard to understand why the laughing gulls don’t just go catch their own fish. Are they just being lazy?

Maybe, but this behavior actually seems to be an evolved strategy. A pelican can dive deeper and get more fish than a laughing gull. So a laughing gull that is able to get some of the pelican’s fish without too much trouble can be more successful – eating better, conserving its energy, and having more time for mating, nesting, or defending its territory.

In the spring, laughing gulls often are busy mating on top of beach buoys. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

It is actually not just laughing gulls that try to steal fish. I once saw a huge frigatebird at Maho Bay attack a small tern sitting on a buoy until it gave up the fish in its mouth. That was a violent form of theft. Also, up north, bald eagles will grab fish from ospreys in a mid-air display of their superior strength.

The laughing gulls can’t take a fish from the pelican by force so, while annoying, they are probably not really scary. And, to an observer, they do look pretty funny riding on the pelicans.

A waiting game (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Gail Karlsson is the author of a photo book Looking for Birds on St. John, as well as two other books about nature in the Virgin Islands – The Wild Life in an Island House, and Learning About Trees and Plants – A Project of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of St. John.  Follow her on Instagram @gailkarlsson and at gvkarlsson.blogspot.com. Website gailkarlsson.com   

Keeping our community informed is our top priority.
If you have a news tip to share, please call or text us at 340-244-6631.

Support local + independent journalism in the U.S. Virgin Islands

Unlike many news organizations, we haven't put up a paywall – we want to keep our journalism as accessible as we can. Our independent journalism costs time, money and hard work to keep you informed, but we do it because we believe that it matters. We know that informed communities are empowered ones. If you appreciate our reporting and want to help make our future more secure, please consider donating.

Jobs - Click Here