Utah State Bird: California Gull
Larus californicus
California Gull
Official State Bird of Utah
State Bird of Utah
- Scientific name
- Larus californicus
- Adopted
- 1955
- Recognition
- White body with slate-gray back and wings
Why Utah Chose This Bird
A cricket plague struck in 1848. Mormon pioneers planted crops after surviving a harsh first winter in Salt Lake Valley. Hordes of crickets descended from the foothills and destroyed ripening crops. Settlers fought with clubs, fire, and water. The swarms continued, shaping the Beehive State identity.
Gulls arrived when desperation peaked. Thousands of birds flew in and fed on crickets for days. Cricket numbers dropped enough to save substantial portions of the harvest. Pioneers credited the birds with preventing starvation.
The gull held unofficial state bird status for decades before 1955. No law actually listed the designation. Representative Richard C. Howe sponsored legislation to correct this oversight. The legislature made it official on February 14, 1955.
Later research challenged the story. A 1959 U.S. Department of Agriculture review found records of nineteen bird species eating Mormon crickets. Blackbirds, magpies, turkeys, and robins all participated. The report noted gulls destroy many crickets but cannot control populations alone. The gull monument still stands in Salt Lake City's Temple Square.
Legislative History
Common Consent Period
George Earlie Shankle wrote in 1934 that Utah considered the gull its state bird by common consent. The bird held this unofficial status for over a century. Everyone knew it symbolized pioneer survival, but statute books contained no formal designation. The Sea Gull Monument erected in Salt Lake City in 1913 reinforced public recognition.
Formal Adoption Process
House Bill 51 came before the 1955 legislature. Representatives Richard C. Howe and Jaren L. Jones sponsored the measure. The bill passed without significant opposition. Governor J. Bracken Lee signed it February 14, 1955 — formalizing a designation that had existed by common consent for over a century.
Species Ambiguity
Utah Code lists the state bird simply as sea gull — no specific species appears in the statute. Official state websites consistently identify it as the California Gull despite this vague language. The imprecision likely reflects the informal common-consent tradition the 1955 law was codifying: everyone knew which gull the monument in Temple Square commemorated.
California Gull Songs and Calls
Audio licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
What This Bird Represents
Pioneer Survival
The gull is tied to the defining survival story of Utah's pioneer settlement. Settlers faced starvation during their first full harvest season. Cricket destruction of crops would have meant death through winter. Gull arrival at the critical moment became known as the Miracle of the Gulls — a story that passed through generations and shaped Utah's founding identity. The Sea Gull Monument in Temple Square, erected in 1913, keeps that memory visible in the state's most visited public space.
Agricultural Protection
Farmers valued gulls as beneficial pest controllers. The birds ate grasshoppers, beetles, and rodents from agricultural fields. They follow plows to pick up insects turned over by machinery, and have been observed waiting near irrigation channels for rodents flushed from their holes. This practical utility reinforced the gull's positive standing in Utah's agricultural communities well beyond the 1848 event.
Monument Recognition
Salt Lake City's Sea Gull Monument commemorates the 1848 event. Two bronze gulls perch atop a granite column in Temple Square. The inscription reads that gulls saved pioneers from starvation by feeding on crickets. Dedicated in 1913, the monument predated official state bird designation by 42 years.
Physical Characteristics
Size and Structure
Adults measure eighteen to twenty-two inches long. Wingspan ranges from forty-eight to fifty-four inches when extended. Weight varies from one pound to just over two pounds. Males run larger than females by six to ten percent in skeletal measurements. Bill appears parallel-sided without the expansion at the gonydeal angle seen in other gulls.
Adult Plumage
Breeding adults show white heads, necks, and underparts. The back and upper wings display slate-gray coloring darker than ring-billed gulls. Black wingtips feature white spots at the tips. Bills are yellow with a black ring near the tip plus a red spot on the lower mandible. Dark brown eyes contrast with bright red orbital rings. Greenish-yellow legs complete the appearance.
Immature Development
First-year juveniles appear mottled brown and white overall. Pink legs and bills with black tips mark young birds. Second-year gulls begin showing gray on the back while retaining brown mottling. Blue tint appears on legs and bill base. Third-year birds resemble adults closely but lack fully developed bill and wing patterns. Full adult plumage arrives in the fourth year.
Field Identification
Size falls between smaller ring-billed gulls and larger herring gulls. Dark eyes distinguish California Gulls from herring gulls. More extensive black on wingtips creates a nearly square-cut shape compared to similar species. Round head and slender bill help separate them from herring gulls in flight.
Behavior and Song
Vocalizations
The main call consists of repetitive kee-yah notes. First two notes stretch longer and more drawn out than later ones. Pitch runs higher than corresponding herring gull calls. Voice quality sounds hoarse and scratchy rather than clear. Breeding colonies create constant noise from gulls defending territories against neighbors.
Foraging Methods
California Gulls use multiple foraging strategies. They walk and wade through shallow water picking up prey, swim while grabbing food from the surface, and swoop down from flight to snatch items. Agricultural areas attract them to follow plows for exposed insects and rodents.
Social Structure
Highly gregarious birds gather in flocks numbering thousands. Colony nesting brings concentrations of 4,000 nests per football field at major sites. Mono Lake hosts 44,000 to 65,000 California Gulls arriving each April. Great Salt Lake supports even larger numbers. Dense nesting means neighbors position within two feet of each other.
Territorial Defense
Breeding gulls defend nest areas aggressively. They stretch necks straight up and open bills to chase intruders. Constant screaming fills colonies as birds protect territories. Despite social nature outside breeding season, territorial behavior prevents other gulls from approaching active nests closely.
Habitat and Range
Breeding Distribution
Nesting occurs around interior lakes and marshes from Northwest Territories south to eastern California and Colorado. Great Salt Lake historically held eighty percent of breeding California Gulls before the 1930s. Mono Lake in California hosts the second-largest colony. New breeding colonies established on reservoirs built across the West after 1930.
Seasonal Movements
Most populations migrate to the Pacific Coast for winter. Some birds remain at interior sites year-round where water stays open. Juveniles sometimes stay coastal through summer instead of returning to breeding grounds. Spring migration brings birds back to colonies three to seven weeks before egg laying begins.
Utah Presence
Great Salt Lake remains the primary breeding location. Colonies nest on islands safe from land predators, where brine flies hatching in large numbers provide rich food sources. Urban gulls also feed at garbage dumps around Salt Lake City and other population centers, and agricultural lands throughout Utah attract foraging birds throughout the breeding season.
Habitat Preferences
Sparsely vegetated islands and levees in saline lakes provide ideal breeding sites. Harsh conditions tolerated by California Gulls exclude ring-billed and herring gulls from some locations. Winter habitat includes seacoasts, estuaries, mudflats, beaches, and farmland. Garbage dumps supply food year-round near cities.
Can You Match All 50 State Birds?
The State Birds Quiz mixes standard image questions with 'odd one out' rounds — showing a shared bird like the Cardinal or Meadowlark and asking which state in the group doesn't actually have it. Plus a few questions about the stories behind the most unusual choices.
Take the State Birds QuizQuick Answers
What is Utah's state bird?
When did Utah adopt the California Gull as state bird?
What happened during the Miracle of the Gulls in 1848?
Why is Utah's state bird named after California?
What does a California Gull look like?
Where can you see California Gulls in Utah?
What do California Gulls eat?
Sources
- Utah's Online Public Library - State Bird
- Cornell Lab of Ornithology - All About Birds
- National Audubon Society Field Guide
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