Pilfering from puffins: How sneaky seagulls steal for survival - Action News
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Pilfering from puffins: How sneaky seagulls steal for survival

A researcher spent the last two summers watching gulls and studying kleptoparasitism or, their habit of stealing food from puffins.

Researcher studies herring gulls and their habitual stealing

Kaylee Busniuk is a master's student with Memorial University's cognitive and behavioural ecology program. (Jonny Hodder/CBC)

Puffins do all the hard work, while seagulls swoop in and reap the rewards.

Nobody knows that more than Memorial University student Kaylee Busniuk, who has spent the last two summers studying the behaviour of birds on Gull Island in Witless Bay, south of St. John's.

She wanted to know more about kleptoparasitism a form of feeding in which one animal takes another's food. In this case, gulls taking from puffinsafter they've made an effort to get food.

For humans, it would be like going through the trouble of grocery shopping, only to get robbed in the parking lot.

"If you had all the costs associated with that [purchase], andthey get the free meal," Busniuk said.

Two gulls attack a puffin as it returns to the slopewith fish in its mouth (KayleeBusniuk/Wilson Animal Behaviour Lab)

Of the three types of seagulls inNewfoundland and Labrador, Busniukfocused onherring gulls.

They perch on the same cliffs where puffins nest, and wait for a puffin to return from open water with a fish in its mouth.

"That's when they're most susceptible to kleptoparasitism because gulls are already standing on the slope and can just lunge over [and] grab them," she said.

According to Busniuk, the study of sneaky gulls began after a surge in the seagull population in the 1970s. Researchers were worried about what that might do to the puffin population, as it coincided with a 30 per cent reduction in breeding.

Gulls move in quickly, causing the puffin to drop its fish and fly away (Kaylee Busniuk/Wilson Animal Behaviour Lab)

By the 1990s, it was established that puffins weren't all that affected by the routine thievery.

Busniuk was interested in finding out if the gulls targeted any puffins in particular, and found specific gulls have specific strategies.

"Some of the gulls, I think they train their chicks, honestly," she said with a laugh."Because their chicks are running around on the slope, and you see the gull attack a puffin and then bring it over to the chick and feed it."

Later in the season, she noticed chicks mimicking the same thieving behaviour as their parents.

A puffin feeds its chick with larval fish, likely sandlance or capelin(KayleeBusniuk/Wilson Animal Behaviour Lab)

As for defence mechanisms, Busniuk said puffins sometimes pull up at the last second and fly back out to sea. They circle and come back in again, and hope the seagulls had lost interest.

To keep track of the birds, Busniuk put coloured jelly in the grass on the cliffsides and waited for them to land in it. When the jelly connected with birds' bellies, it left adistinctive markon each one.

The jelly was harmless, and wore off after a week or two.

"Last year, if there was any funny coloured gulls in your pictures, that was me," she said.

A puffin sits on a grassy slope overlooking the water with a fish in its mouth, while a herring gull perches nearby. (Kaylee Busniuk)

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from On the Go