<chapter>
    <title>Gulls</title>
    <para>Author</para>
    <para>Author Blurb</para>
    <mediaobject>
        <imageobject>
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    <sect1>
        <title>Overview</title>
        <sect2>
            <title>Summary of biological and ecological information</title>
            <para>Summary of important biological and ecological information</para>
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Summary of Damage Prevention and Control Methods</title>
            <sect3>
                <title>Exclusion </title>
                <para> General Information about Exclusion</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Cultural Methods </title>
                <para> Methods to change the behavior of the host environment
                </para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Frightening </title>
                <para> Control by fear </para>
                <para> Avitrol®. </para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Repellents </title>
                <para> Smell, taste, noise</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Toxicants </title>
                <para> Chemicals</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Trapping </title>
                <para>Traps </para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Shooting </title>
                <para> Shooting with rifle or shotgun under special permit. </para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Other Methods </title>
                <para> Removal of nests, eggs, and young. Sterilization of eggs. </para>
            </sect3>
        </sect2>
    </sect1>
    <sect1>
        <title>Species Profile</title>
        <sect2>
            <title>Identification </title>
            <sect3>
                <title>Name</title>
                <para>Include a list of accepted common names, scientific names, and regionally accepted names</para>
                <para>The term gull refers to members of a group of 23 North American bird species
                    that belong to the family Laridae, subfamily Larinae.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Description</title>
                <para>Gulls are robust birds with webbed feet, long wings and a slightly hooked beak
                    (Fig. 1). They all possess exceptional flying ability. They are often seen
                    swimming, and occasionally dive underwater. Adult gulls are white, with varying
                    patterns of gray and black over the back, wings, and head. The young of larger
                    species are often gray and take several years to develop adult plumage. The
                    sexes are similar in appearance.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Size</title>
                <para>(phrase) Measurements - Lengths (from tip of snout to base of tail where it emerges from
                    pelvis); English units then metric in parenthesis. Indicate approximate weight</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Voice</title>
                <para>(phrases) Describe the voice or call; may include season or under what
                    circumstance each is used.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Tracks and Signs</title>
                <para>Description of tracks and signs of animal presence</para>
            </sect3>
            
            <sect3>
                <title>Image</title>
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            </sect3>
        </sect2>
        
        <sect2>
            <title>General Biology, Reproduction, and Behavior </title>
            <para>In the Great Lakes region, the number of ring-billed gulls has been increasing at
                about 10% per year since the early 1970s. Bent (1947) said of it, “the ring-billed
                gull yields readily to persecution, is easily driven from its breeding grounds and
                seems to prefer to breed in remote, unsettled regions far from the haunts of man.”
                However, a colony on Leslie Spit on the water-front of Toronto, Ontario, increased
                from 20 pairs in 1973 to 75,000 to 80,000 pairs in 1982 (Blokpoel 1983). It appears
                that ring-billed gulls have changed some of their habits in recent years and have
                adapted to humans in their environment. A colony of laughing gulls in the Jamaica
                Bay Unit of Gateway National Recreation Area, New York, increased from 15 pairs in
                1979 to 7,600 pairs in 1990 (Richard A. Dolbeer, pers. commun.)</para>
            <sect3>
                <title>Reproduction</title>
                <para>(phrases) Age at first breeding, litters/clutches per year, young per litter/clutch Months of year in which breeding occurs, courtship behaviors,
                    circumstances under which breeding occurs; be sensitive to young readers</para>
               <para>(phrases) When born, physical description at birth, length of
                    time until weaned, description of juvenile form, expected life span</para>
                <para>Gulls produce 3 to 5 eggs per nest.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Nesting Cover</title>
                <para>(phrases) Describe cover used for nesting, protection</para>
                <para>Most gulls nest in colonies on sand-and gravel-covered shorelines and islands.
                    They build nests on the ground.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Seasonal Behavior</title>
                <para>Changes (sentences) May include how/where it overwinters, seasonal changes in
                    physical appearance or behavior; migration patterns if appropriate</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Other</title>
                <para>Catch-all for any other interesting tidbits</para>
            </sect3>
            
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Ecology</title>
            
            <sect3>
                <title>Species Range</title>
                <para>(phrases) Where in US this organism can found; “statewide” if found throughout state</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Distribution in Country</title>
                <para>(phrases) Where in US this organism can found; “statewide” if found throughout
                    state</para>
                <para>The herring (Larus argentatus) and ring-billed (L. delawarensis) gulls are the
                    most common and widespread of the species. They are distributed through-out
                    North America, from coastal to inland areas, from unsettled areas to the
                    downtown cores of large cities, from farmers’ fields to fast-food out-lets and
                    drive-in theaters. Other com-mon species include the laughing gull(L.
                    atricilla), Franklin’s gull (L. pipixcan), great black-backed gull (L. marinus),
                    and California gull (L. californicus). Some species are limited to coastal
                    habitats, while others may occur inland seasonally, rarely, or in specialized
                    habitats.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Habitat</title>
                <para>(phrases) Where it lives, including conditions required</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Food Habits</title>
                <para>(phrases) List commonly eaten foods in range; list foods comprising bulk of
                    diet first, if known. Use specific organisms if possible so we can link to their
                    accounts.</para>
                <para>Gulls feed on land or water on aquatic animals, terrestrial invertebrates and
                    small vertebrates, plant remains, car-rion, and refuse. They frequently take the
                    eggs and young of other nesting seabirds. Small species, including ring-billed,
                    laughing, and Franklin’s gulls, may also feed in the air on flying
                    in-sects.</para>
            </sect3>        
            <sect3>
            <title>Ecological Role</title>
            <para>(sentences) How this organism affects other organisms in its ecosystem; may include position in food chain, what organisms depend upon this organism and why; include description of symbiotic relationships if appropriate; use specific organisms where possible so we can make links to their accounts</para>
        </sect3>
        </sect2>

        <sect2>
            <title>Legal Status</title>
            <para>Applicable federal, state, and municipal regs. </para>
            <para> Gulls are classified as migratory species and thus are protected by federal and,
                in most cases, state laws. In the United States, gulls may be taken only with a
                permit issued by the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Permits are issued only after
                frightening techniques, physical barriers, or both have been used correctly and
                qualified personnel certify that these methods have been ineffective. Some states
                may re-quire an additional permit to kill gulls. No federal permit is needed,
                however, to frighten or mechanically exclude gulls. </para>
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Conservation</title>
            <para>Wise use(sentences) How it it used and managed? What the reader can do to conserve or manage this organism; paragraph form please</para>
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Attributes</title>
            <para>Description of benefits provided by the species (aesthetics, recreation, food, fiber, scientific, ecological, economic, medicinal, etc…)</para>
        </sect2>
<sect2>
    <title>Safety</title>
    <para>How to protect yourself from wildlife</para>
</sect2>
        
        <sect2>
        <title>Wildlife Diseases</title>
            <para>Diseases transmissible to humans, livestock, and other wildlife of human interest. Impacts, ecology, epidemiology. </para>
        <sect3>
            <title>Agent</title>
            <para>cause of wildlife disease</para>
        </sect3>
        <sect3>
            <title>Vector</title>
            <para>ways in which the disease spreads</para>
        </sect3>
        <sect3>
            <title>Reservoir</title>
            <para>sources of the disease</para>
        </sect3>
        <sect3>
            <title>Host</title>
            <para>animals that carry the disease</para>
        </sect3>
        <sect3>
            <title>Prevention</title>
            <para>Information on preventing getting or transmitting diseases</para>
        </sect3>
        <sect3>
            <title>Symptoms</title>
            <para>description of disease symptoms</para>
        </sect3>
        <sect3>
            <title>Diagnosis</title>
            <para>How to determine the presence of the disease</para>
        </sect3>
        <sect3>
            <title>Treatment</title>
            <para>Treatment methods</para>
        </sect3>
        
    </sect2>
    </sect1>  
    <sect1>
        <title>Damage Prevention and Control Methods</title>
         <sect2>
            <title>Damage and Nuisance Behavior</title>
            <para> Increasing gull populations in North America during the past century have led to
                a variety of problems for different segments of society. Gulls cause damage to
                agricultural crops and threaten human safety at and near air-ports. They are
                involved in more collisions with aircraft than any other bird group because they are
                numerous and widely distributed. The presence of gull roosts near reservoirs
                increases their potential for transmitting diseases to human populations. Gulls
                occasionally cause a nuisance when they nest on rooftops and seek food from people
                eating out-of-doors. Gulls are predators of several seabirds during the breeding
                season. Expanding and colonizing gull populations may have detrimental affects on
                the breeding performance of these other, often preferred, species. </para>
         </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Damage Identification</title>
            <para>Signs and description of damage and information for both damage and species identification. Typical time when damage from pest can be expected </para>
            <sect3>
                <title>Biological Signs of Presence</title>
                <para>A brief repeat of tracks and sign of the presence of animals from the Identification section. Tracks, scat, hair, sounds, middens, scratches, bite marks.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Damage to Structures</title>
                <para>Houses, barns, outbuildings, cars</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Damage to Animals</title>
                <para>Livestock, pets</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Damage to Gardens and Landscapes</title>
                <para>Home gardens, ornamentals</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Damage to Commodity Crops</title>
                <para>Damage to commericial crops</para>
            </sect3>
            
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Integrated Pest Management</title>
            <sect3>
                <title>Monitoring</title>
                <para>Information of monitoring nuisance behavior</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Tolerance Levels</title>
                <para>Acceptable level of damage or nuisance behavior</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Timing</title>
                <para>Timing of control efforts to maximize efficacy.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Diversity</title>
                <para>Problems with removing the pest from the habitat.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Persistence</title>
                <para>The tenacity of the pest to continue creating damage or nuisance behavior</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Cost Effectiveness</title>
                <para>Cost of preventing wildlife damage</para>
            </sect3>
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Economics</title>
            <para>Positive and negative costs of damage created by nuisance wildlife</para>
        </sect2>

            <sect2>
                <title>Habitat Modification </title>
                <sect3>
                    <title>Sanitation</title>
                 <para> Habitat modification to discourage gull use of areas includes reducing or
                    eliminating food, nesting and resting sites, and water. Reducing food availability
                    is not easy, because of gulls’ adaptability in using a wide variety of foods. Human
                    food wastes, fruit and vegetable crops, insects, earth-worms, and other
                    invertebrates and vertebrates are all potential foods that may require careful
                    control to reduce their availability. Municipalities may find it useful to modify or
                    eliminate artificial feeding sites that gulls have habituated to in recent years,
                    such as garbage dumps and landfills, fish docks, trawlers, food processing plants,
                    sewer outfalls, and livestock feedlots. </para>                   
                </sect3>
                <sect3>
                    <title>Manipulation</title>
                    <para> Manipulate grass height by limiting mowing to discourage gulls from using
                    airports, park areas, and playing fields as resting or loafing areas. A height of 8
                    inches (20 cm) may discourage laughing gulls, but herring gulls can see over it and
                    will not necessarily be discouraged unless the grass is higher. Where ponds are
                    attractive to gulls, filling or draining may aid in reducing the suitability of such
                    habitats. </para>                
                </sect3>
                <sect3>
                    <title>Cultural Control</title>
                    <para>cultural methods</para>
                </sect3>

            </sect2>
            <sect2>   
            <title>Exclusion</title>
                <para> Exclusion of gulls from attractive areas (garbage dumps, sewage discharge areas,
                    drive-in theaters, catering establishments) near airports can significantly reduce
                    gull use of airport surfaces and flight ways used by aircraft. </para>
                <para> Exclude gulls from limited resting areas such as window ledges and roof tops by
                    covering the surfaces with porcupine wires (see Pigeons). Exclude them from large
                    areas such as water reservoirs, crop fields, and landfills, by installing wire or
                    plastic netting or suspending parallel steel wire (28-gauge[0.36 mm]) or nylon
                    monofilament line (50-pound [23-kg] test) over the area. Wire or monofilament
                    spacing may be 40 feet (12 m) for large gulls to 15 feet(4.5 m) for smaller ones. </para>
                <para> Birds have long been excluded from ponds in which fish are raised by using heavy,
                    easily visible wires. Amling (1980) used strong, fine steel wires (28 gauge [0.036
                    cm]) on long, parallel spans up to 80 feet (25 m) apart to exclude gulls from a
                    water reservoir. Wires have been used successfully to exclude most herring and
                    ring-billed gulls from garbage dumps. McLaren et al. (1984) found that a wire
                    spacing of 30 feet (9 m) worked if the food attraction was not too great.
                    Fifteen-foot (6-m) spacing worked even with very abundant food. Blokpoel and Tessier
                    (1984) reported the successful exclusion of ring-billed gulls from food service
                    areas in Toronto using widely spaced nylon monofilament lines. They used more
                    closely spaced lines to exclude the same species from part of a nesting area used by
                    more than 70,000 pairs of gulls. </para>
                <para> The reason that gulls rarely fly under or between fine parallel wires is not
                    clearly understood. Other birds, including pigeons, regularly fly under and between
                    the wires. The fine wires and lines are almost invisible at 35 feet (10 m) or more
                    and may not be easily seen by gulls as they spiral down to land. The avoidance
                    reaction when the wires are seen is spectacular and may disturb other gulls enough
                    to make them avoid the wired area. </para>
            <sect3>
                <title>Structural</title>
                <para>Inspection. Ledge products,electric ledge products, rodent-proof construction.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Fencing</title>
                <para>Electric and non-electric</para>
            </sect3>
                <sect3>
                    <title>Netting and lines</title>
                    <para>Netting and lines</para>
                </sect3>
                <sect3>
                    <title>Other barriers</title>
                    <para>Cylinders, wraps</para>
                </sect3>
                
        </sect2>

        <sect2>
            <title>Frightening Devices</title>
            <sect3>
                <title>Auditory</title>
                         <para> Frightening devices used successfully against gulls include shotgun shells,  gas-powered exploders, and broadcasts of distress and alarm calls (see
                Bird Dispersal Techniques). To be successful, all scaring devices should be used by experienced,
                dedicated personnel. Continuity and care in use are the most important factors. Most
                distress and alarm calls are species-specific and may even be specific to local
                dialects. They must be used sparingly to avoid familiarity and are best used from a
                stationary source. The birds will first approach the source of sound and after 5 to
                10 minutes will move away from the area. Shell crackers can be used to direct the
                departure. They are most effective when the birds are airborne and have begun to
                move away from the sound source. Frightening devices are not a cure for repeated
                presence of gulls. </para>   
                
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Visual</title>
                <para>Visual devices that frighten wildlife</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Audio-visual</title>
                <para>Audi-visual devices that frighten wildlife, shell crackers,  radio-controlled small aircraft, that can be constructed to resemble falcons.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Biological</title>
                <para>Biological approaches  that frighten wildlife, Livestock guarding animals (dogs, llamas, mules, cattle), Trained birds of  prey,  Border collies, Dead gulls or gull decoys placed in dead gull postures can be used, especially in conjunction with other frightening devices to frighten gulls from an area.</para>
            </sect3>  
            
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Repellents </title>
            <para>Compounds (active ingredients, formulations), registrations, sites, application, restrictions, safety</para>
            <para> Avitrol® concentrate (4-aminopyri-dine) is federally registered for the control
                of herring gulls in the United States. The current label allows for its use to
                frighten gulls that are feeding, nesting, loafing, or roosting near or in the
                vicinity of sanitary landfills, air-ports, and structures. Apply the concentrate to
                bread, as specified on the product label. Mortality is minimized by limiting the
                amount of bait offered. Avitrol® used for this purpose is a Restricted Use
                Pesticide. State and federal permits are required in order to use Avitrol® on gulls.
            </para>
            <sect3>
                <title>Pain Inducing</title>
                <para>Methods that repel animals by inducing pain. Research is being conducted on methyl  anthranilate, a product that has shown some efficacy in repelling gulls from shallow pools of water used for loafing and watering.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Fear Inducing</title>
                <para>methods that repel animals by inducing fear.  Mimicry of predator odors.</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Tactile</title>
                        <para> Polybutenes can be used as a tactile repellent to keep gulls from landing on
                beams, posts, and other structural materials. </para>    
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Aversive conditioning</title>
                <para>Repellents that work by inducing aversive conditioning.</para>
            </sect3>
            
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Toxicants </title>
            <para> The toxicant DRC-1339 is a Restricted Use Pesticide that is registered in the
                United States for the control of nesting herring gulls, great black-backed gulls,
                and ring-billed gulls. Its use is limited to coastal areas where high gull
                populations are conflicting with less-abundant colonial water birds. The toxicant is
                mixed with bread and is placed directly on gull nests. DRC-1339 is slow acting and
                apparently painless. Death is caused by uremic poisoning. </para>
            <sect3>
                <title>Anticoagulants</title>
                <para>Toxicants that use anticoagulants, First generation, second generation</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Non-anticoagulants</title>
                <para>Toxicants that are non-anticoagulants</para>
            </sect3>
           <sect3>
               <title>Fumigants</title>
               <para>Fumigants</para>
           </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Bait Stations</title>
                <para>Toxicants that are administered by bait stations</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Active Ingredients</title>
                <para>Main chemical compounds</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Formulations</title>
                <para>Typical formulations</para>
            </sect3>
            
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Trapping </title>
            <para>Regulations, humaneness, disposition, safety, public relations</para>
            <para> Gulls can be live trapped by several techniques, including rocket or cannon
                netting over baited sites, setting box traps over nests and eggs, and spot-lighting
                at night and capturing with hand nets. Gulls are very mobile and if relocated, would
                likely home back to their original place of capture. There-fore, live-trapped gulls
                should be euthanized with carbon dioxide gas. </para>
            <sect3>
                <title>Cage</title>
                <para>Type of cage trap</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Body Gripping traps</title>
               <para>Type of body gripping trap</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Foot-hold</title>
                <para>Type and use of foot-hold traps</para>
            </sect3>
            
            <sect3>
                <title>Snares</title>
                <para>Type and use of snares</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Chemical immobilization</title>
                <para>Type and use of chemical immobilants, Oral and distance delivery, regulations, administration</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Other</title>
                <para>Other methods for capturing animals.  Hand, hook and line.</para>
            </sect3>
            
            <sect3>
                <title>Relocation</title>
                <para>Feasibility and legality of relocation</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Translocation</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Euthanasia</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Shooting </title>
            <para>Regulations, humaneness, bullet placement, disposition, safety, public relations</para>
            <para> Shooting gulls with shotguns or rifles can be a highly selective and useful form
                of control under certain conditions. Federal and possibly state permits are
                required. Shooting has been used to eliminate gulls that habitually fly over airport
                runways (for example, Kennedy Airport, New York) and of-fending individuals that are
                preying on the eggs and nestlings of protected species (for example, black-headed
                gulls, Norfolk, United Kingdom). Caution must be used so that shooting does not
                disturb the protected species. Shooting is not a very successful method for reducing
                large colonies because of the relatively small number of gulls that normally can be
                shot. </para>
            <sect3>
                <title>Opportunistic</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Sharp-shooting</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Call and Shoot</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Arial Gunning</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Harvest Management</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Biological</title>
            <para>Sterilization of eggs. Several methods can be used to ensure that eggs do not
                hatch, including pricking, formalin injection, shaking, and spraying with or dipping
                in an oil emulsion solution. To inhibit replacement, eggs must be returned to the
                nest and not externally damaged.</para>
            <sect3>
                <title>Pathogens</title>
                <para>Disease agents, genetic recombination, environmental safety, regulations</para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Predators</title>
                <para>Predator-prey relationships, Introduced (invasive) species</para>
            </sect3>
            </sect2>
            
            <sect2>
                <title>Fertility Control</title>
                <para></para>
            
            <sect3>
                <title>Sterilization</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Contraception</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Endocrine Therapy</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Immunocontraception</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Egg Oiling</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Addling</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            <sect3>
                <title>Puncturing</title>
                <para></para>
            </sect3>
            
            </sect2>
        
        <sect2>
            <title>Other Methods </title>
            <para> Removal of nests, eggs, and young. To be effective, removal of all nests, eggs,
                and young from a colony should be done every 2 weeks. Activities are time-consuming
                and labor intensive and renesting is usually attempted, often in more remote areas.
                Permits are necessary. </para>
        </sect2>
    </sect1>
    <sect1>
        <title>Resources and Acknowledgments</title>
        <sect2>
            <title>Related Species</title>
            <para>List species and practices used in the account to which we can provide a link for more information elsewhere on the site, to another account for instance or to a nwco technique. </para>
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Glossary Words</title>
            <para>List technical terms used in the account that a fifth-grader would not understand.</para>
        </sect2>
        
        <sect2>
            <title>Acknowledgments </title>
            <para> John F. Bardwell and Alfred J. Godin reviewed a draft of this chapter and
                provided helpful comments. </para>
            <para> Figure 1 is by Jill Sack Johnson. </para>
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Photo Credits</title>
            <para>List of individuals that contributed photos</para>
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>References and Additional Information </title>
            <para> Amling, W. 1980. Exclusion of gulls from reservoirs in Orange County, California.
                Proc. Vertebr. Pest Conf. 9:29-30. </para>
            <para> Bent, A. C. 1947. Life histories of North American gulls and terns. Dodd, Mead,
                and Co., New York. 333 pp. </para>
            <para> Blokpoel, H. 1976. Bird hazards to aircraft. Clark, Irwin, and Co. Ltd., in
                assoc. with Environment Canada. 235 pp. </para>
            <para> Blokpoel, H. 1983. Gull problems in Ontario. Info. Leaflet, Canadian Wildl.
                Serv., Ottawa, Ontario. 9 pp. </para>
            <para> Blokpoel, H. 1985. Report on damage to crops by gulls in southwestern Ontario.
                Canadian Wildl. Serv. Ottawa, Ontario. 3 pp. </para>
            <para> Blokpoel, H., and G.D. Tessier. 1984. Overhead wires to exclude ring-billed gulls
                from public places in Toronto, Ontario. Wildl. Soc. Bull. 12:55-58. </para>
            <para> Blokpoel, H., and G.D. Tessier. 1986. The ring-billed gull in Ontario: A review
                of a new problem species. Occas. Paper No. 57, Canadian Wildl. Serv., Ottawa,
                Ontario. 34 pp. </para>
            <para> Dolbeer, R. A., M. Chevalier, P. P. Woronecki, and E. B. Butler. 1989. Laughing
                gulls at </para>
            <para> J. F. K. Airport: safety hazard or wildlife resource? Proc. Eastern Wildl. Damage
                Control Conf. 4:37-44. </para>
            <para> McAtee, W. L., and S. E. Piper. 1936. Excluding birds from reservoirs and fish
                ponds. Leaflet 120, US Dep. Agric. 6 pp. </para>
            <para> McLaren, M. A., R. E. Harris, and W. J. Richardson. 1984. Effectiveness of an
                overhead wire barrier in deterring gulls from feeding at a sanitary landfill. Pages
                241-251 in Proc. wildl. hazards to aircraft conf. training workshop. US Dep. Trans.,
                Fed. Aviation Admin., Washington, DC. </para>
            <para> Solman, V. E. F. 1973. Birds and aircraft. Biol. Conserv. 5:79-86. </para>
            <para> Solman, V. E. F. 1978. Gulls and aircraft. Environ. Conserv.5:277-280. </para>
            <para> Solman, V. E. F. 1981. Birds and aviation. Environ. Conserv.8:45-51. </para>
            <para> Solman, V. E. F. 1984. Reducing gull use of some attractions near airports. Pages
                209-212 in Proc. wildl. hazards to aircraft conf. and training workshop. US Dep.
                Trans., Fed. Aviation Admin., Washington, DC. </para>
            <para> Solman, V. E. F., H. Blokpoel, and J. Laidlaw. 1984. Keeping unwanted gulls away,
                a progress report. Proc. Eastern Wildl. Damage Control Conf. 1:311. </para>
            <para> Thomas, G. J. 1972. A review of gull damage and management methods at nature
                reserves. Biol. Conserv. 4:117-127. </para>
        </sect2>
        <sect2>
            <title>Editors </title>
            <para> Scott E. Hygnstrom </para>
            <para> Robert M. Timm </para>
            <para> Gary E. Larson </para>
        </sect2>
    </sect1>
</chapter>
